Clutha defenders damn dams
By JOANNE CARROLL - 05:00 20/04/2009
The Southland Times
The hefty economic potential of a proposed river parkway along the Clutha River would be destroyed by Contact Energy's plans to dam the river, according to the Clutha Mata-Au River Parkway Group.
Chairman Lewis Verduyn said the group was in "resolute opposition" to Contact Energy's dam proposals released on Friday.
It is the second community group to reject the proposals this week. The Friends of Beaumont group is reforming to oppose the plan and has said it is looking for support from groups like the Clutha Guardians and the Clutha River Group to jointly oppose the plans.
Contact released details of four possible projects for hydro-electric dams at Luggate, Queensberry, Beaumont and Tuapeka.
Mr Verduyn said the Parkway Group had been working since 2003 to create New Zealand's largest river parkway along the entire 338km Clutha Mata-Au corridor, including a river-length Clutha River Trail. The group was the umbrella body for community groups along the river like the Clutha Gold Trail Trust and the Upper Clutha Tracks Trust who were working on developing sections of the trail and parkway.
The Albert Town to Luggate section was "ready to go" this year, he said.
"The Clutha Mata-Au River Parkway project, together with the Clutha River Trail, offers truly long-term, sustainable and economic benefits to the local communities. Contact's dam plans do not offer us a better alternative."
He was unimpressed by the prospect of some 400 construction jobs. "Temporary jobs are not an incentive. The Clutha River Parkway and the Clutha River Trail will create many more jobs sooner and they will be permanent," he said.
None of the four options presented by Contact was supportable. "It is totally unacceptable to destroy unique conservation land, including the nationally important Birch Island, the Rongahere native corridor and the Upper Clutha conservation corridor," he said.
Parkway Group executive committee member Gilbert van Reenen said the Clutha River system was ranked as one of the finest in the world. "The Clutha River has already been vandalised to provide more than double Otago's entire industrial and residential electricity requirements," he said.
Contact's hydro development manager Neil Gillespie said he did not doubt that a Clutha parkway would have benefits for Otago.
"We believe our proposal will have benefits also," he said.
Contact was looking for feedback on the proposals, he said.
Monday, April 20, 2009
Resolute Opposition to Dams
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