Environmentalists likely to fight any new Clutha dams
By PAUL GORMAN
The Press 18/04/2009
Dusting off decades-old plans for a Clutha River power station is likely to ignite environmental outrage, Central Otago Mayor Malcolm Macpherson says.
Contact Energy has resurrected proposals for four dams along the Clutha River at either Luggate, Queensberry, Beaumont or Tuapeka Mouth and wants feedback before settling on one option for formal consultation.
The Government and others have welcomed the move, as has Macpherson, for the potential economic benefits another Clutha dam might bring.
But he warns of international hostility if the upper Clutha is touched and harks back to another great environmental battle, saying the backlash would make "Manapouri look like tiddlywinks".
"I think that is definitely the case. It will be substantially about the loss of wild river. That piece of the Clutha from Lake Wanaka until it mingles with the Kawarau at Cromwell is a special river," he said.
"It is effectively the wild river as it always has been, and has some special attributes that I think you'll be seeing people from all around the country, even the world, concerned about. I can almost hear the cry now: `Save the Clutha'.
"There'll be no shortage of people prepared to advocate for it. What Contact has done today may be the 'step too far' that will get people moving."
Central Otago was the country's "Saudi Arabia" of renewable energy. Further development on the Clutha was inevitable, he said.
"If you have a government wanting 85 per cent of our energy to be renewable, there's no way you can ignore it. Inevitably, one day these resources will be exploited," he said.
Energy and Resources Minister Gerry Brownlee said the 10-year plan made "good sense" and would probably meet the criteria for fast-tracking under an amended Resource Management Act.
"Where a river has been substantially altered, you might look for more on that than picking on some pris-tine alternative elsewhere," he said.
"It is useful for Contact to have a look.
"I'm pleased there are ideas out there on the books and people who have taken on the responsibility for generation of electricity are looking at them."
Contact spokesman Jonathan Hill said only one of the options would be chosen.
"At this stage that's our thinking. We want to have discussions with local communities over the next year or so and in 2010 want to select our preferred option, then look to consult on a specific option."
If resource consents were granted, completion and commissioning would be towards the end of the next decade, he said.
Clutha Mayor Juno Hayes said the proposals had been bubbling along for ages.
"It's not a hot topic down here," he said.
"The river has been modified to a very large extent now, so whether it's us or our children or grandchildren, the potential for development of the Clutha will always be there."
Queenstown Lakes District Mayor Clive Geddes said Contact owned significant areas of land around Luggate and Queensberry and some resource consents were already in place.
"There would be absolutely no surprises if they were to proceed with it," he said.
Electricity consultant Bryan Leyland welcomed the re-emergence of the options.
"It's a very good idea," he said.
"The main thing is hydro development is cheaper and better than wind generation.
"What they are doing is making use of existing storage.
"I would be pretty confident the two upstream options would be pretty harmless.
"The downstream ones would be more debatable, but they are bigger and better," Leyland said.
Saturday, April 18, 2009
Dams Risk International Backlash
Labels:
Clutha dams,
Contact Energy,
Tuapeka Mouth
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
0 comments:
Post a Comment