Dam safety regime delay controversial
By Colin Williscroft, on Monday 9 August 2010
Otago Daily Times
A Clutha River lobby group worried about way the safety of large dams in New Zealand is monitored is dismayed a proposed new dam-safety scheme has been delayed.
A scheme was due to come into effect on July 1 but was deferred, in the wake of an independent review.
Building and construction Minister Maurice Williamson said the two-year delay would allow time for the review's recommendations to be fully considered and any legislative amendments made.
That drew fire from the Clutha River Forum, which said a national safety scheme was long overdue and until one was implemented, large dam safety in New Zealand depended on the public having "blind faith" in dam owners.
"They do their own inspections and there is no guarantee those inspections are accurate.
"They employ their own inspectors and we have to rely on them," he said.
"During the consultation for the review, one SOE even suggested that large corporate dam owners should be exempted from the safety scheme.
"Considering that large dams are potentially the most dangerous, this attitude is alarming, to say the least."
Countries such as the United States had a independent authority to oversee dam safety and New Zealand needed to follow that example, Mr Verduyn said.
Dam safety in New Zealand is the responsibility of regional authorities.
Pioneer Generation engineer Peter Mulvihill, of Alexandra, said an independent authority was just one proposal identified in the review.
Mr Mulvihill, vice-president of the International Committee on Large Dams and member of the working group studying proposals, said while such an authority gave an opportunity to provide consistent safety standards, similar bodies overseas had mixed experiences.
"We're not behind the rest of the world.
"We have a lot of responsible dam owners who have a really good record of looking after dams with state-of-the-art safety standards."
Mr Williamson said the delay was to ensure what was implemented was effective and efficient: "The current proposed safety regime is overly costly and complex and has the potential to force owners of small farm dams in remote areas to follow the same processes as owners of big hydro-electric dams," he said.
"Following an independent review of the proposed scheme, we are now planning to revise it to ensure dams that pose a higher risk and therefore need specific safety plans, are more clearly identified.
"I want to make sure we get the right level of risk management without imposing unnecessary costs."
The Department of Building and Housing is taking submissions on the Dam Safety Review.
Submissions close on Friday.
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