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The Ramsar Convention on Wetlands
World
Wetlands Day 2006 in New Zealand
Scoop
Independent News
http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/AK0601/S00074.htm
Official launch
for wetland built to save lake
Friday, 20 January 2006, 12:10 pm
Press Release: Environment Bay of Plenty
The Lake Okaro wetland
Media Release
Official
launch for wetland built to help save lake
For immediate release:
Friday 20 January 2006
One of the regions
largest constructed wetlands will be officially opened at a ceremony attended
by the Minister for Local Government, Mark Burton, near Rotorua on Friday
3 February.
The event, which
marks World Wetlands Day in the Bay of Plenty, will take place at the
site of a wetland built by Environment Bay of Plenty to improve water
quality in Lake Okaro. It celebrates a very visible sign of
the progress being made to save the Rotorua lakes, says Environment Bay
of Plenty chairman John Cronin.
Over the past few
years, Environment Bay of Plenty, its strategic partners, Rotorua District
Council and Te Arawa Maori Trust Board, and the lakes community
have put a really huge effort into the Rotorua Lakes Protection
and Restoration Action Programme. It is a massive and costly task
but these lakes are national icons and we need to do everything we can
to protect and restore them, Mr Cronin says.
At the moment, the
programme is tackling water quality in five lakes. This year, Action Plans
will begin on seven more lakes. Though planning and research are
important starting points, its the actions that follow which count
in the end, Mr Cronin says. Over the past two to three years,
we have laid a solid foundation on which to act. We have put in place
a number of important rules to help stop further increases of nutrients
going into the lakes. Rotorua District Council has launched a massive
sewerage reticulation programme. We are dosing some lakes and streams
with minerals that help improve water quality, and are testing others,
including Lake Okaro. We expect to build the diversion wall that will
be the saving of Lake Rotoiti this year. The Lake Okaro wetland
is a visible sign of progress and, as such, needs to be celebrated, he
adds. It is a big day for the Rotorua lakes programme.
The official ceremony
to launch the wetland starts at Lake Okaro reserve at 10am. Mr Burton
will be guest speaker. It will be followed at 11.30am by a three-hour
field day for landowners and others interested in restoring and building
wetlands. They will be able to talk to wetland experts, including designers
and builders, environmental scientists, and regional and district council
planners. The field day is organised by Fish and Game Eastern Region,
the Department of Conservation, Rotorua District Council and Environment
Bay of Plenty as a World Wetlands Day event. It will run until 2.30pm.
The Lake Okaro wetland
covers 2.3ha and encompasses both private land, owned by farmers Shane
and June Birchall, and Rotorua District Council reserve. It was built
by Environment Bay of Plenty for the purpose of filtering nutrients from
the water in two streams that run right through it. The wetlands
construction is one of the main actions in an Action Plan to improve water
quality in Lake Okaro.
All are welcome to
attend the official opening, at 10am, or the field day. Lake Okaro is
about 20 minutes drive south of Rotorua. When travelling on State Highway
5 to Taupo, turn left off the highway just past the regional boundary
(State Highway 38) and then left again at the Lake Okaro road sign (Okaro
Road).
http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/PA0602/S00049.htm
Nanaia Mahuta: Lake Okaro Wetlands Opening
Friday, 3 February 2006, 12:39 pm
Press Release: New Zealand Government
Lake
Okaro Wetlands Opening
Delivered
by Associate Local Government Minister Nanaia Mahuta
Kia ora tätou
Te Arawa waka, Te Arawa tangata
Kei te mihi, kei te mihi, kei te mihi
E ngä mana, e nga reo
Tënä koutou, tënä koutou
Kia ora tätou katoa
Good morning everyone.
Thank you very much for inviting me here today to join in the celebrations
for the opening of this magnificent wetland. Greetings to Mr John Cronin,
chairman of Environment Bay of Plenty, Mr Kevin Winters, mayor of Rotorua
District Council, Mr Anaru Rangiheuea, Chairman of the Te Arawa Mäori
Trust Board, Mr Paul Dell who is the Rotorua Lakes Protection and Restoration
Programme Coordinator, and to all of you here today.
It is a pleasure
and an honour to be here this morning at Lake Okaro to take part in the
official opening of this wetland. It is also very appropriate that today's
event coincides with World Wetlands Day, celebrated yesterday, which marks
the date of the signing of the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands on 2 February
1971. This intergovernmental treaty provides a basis for national action
and international cooperation for the conservation of wetlands across
the globe. World Wetlands Day has been celebrated since 1997 and provides
opportunities for government agencies, organisations, community groups
and individuals to raise public awareness of the values and benefits of
wetlands, and to highlight the need for prudent management of the world's
wetlands.
As we have already
heard this morning, the opening of the Lake Okaro wetland is a significant
occasion, resulting from a lot of hard work, and culminating in the construction
of this wetland to improve water quality in the lake, which all users
will benefit from.
Of course, it could
not have been made possible without the dedication and hard work of all
of the people and organisations involved - including Environment Bay of
Plenty, the Rotorua District Council, and the Te Arawa Mäori Trust
Board - representatives of which make up the Rotorua Lakes Strategy Joint
Committee - of course, landowners Shane and June Birchall, consultants
and contractors, members of the community and local iwi, and everyone
else who had a role to play in the Lake Okaro Wetland development.
ADVERTISEMENT
As someone who lives near the wonderful Lake Taupo, I understand and deeply
appreciate the value that lakes have to offer to their communities - from
the water and stunning beauty of lakes and surrounding land, to the special
cultural and spiritual values they offer. Positive action needs to be
taken now to ensure that lakes, in addition to other natural resources,
can be enjoyed by us today and by future generations.
The development of
the wetland that you see before you today is a significant step in this
direction, and reflects the importance that local government and the community
place on preserving and enhancing each lake's natural qualities and values.
In addition to improving the quality of Lake Okaro's water, we are preserving
and protecting an important habitat for native fish, water fowl and plants.
We are also maintaining the area's natural beauty, and ensuring that an
important recreational facility is protected and made as safe as possible,
for the enjoyment of a wide range of users.
Central government
contribution/involvement
Central government
has made significant contributions towards the conservation and improvement
of lakes throughout the country.
Central government
is contributing to several initiatives currently underway to address lake
water quality issues in the Rotorua area. These initiatives are:
- Funding of $4 million
towards short-term remedial works for the proposed Ohau Channel diversion
structure in relation to Lake Rotoiti and Lake Rotorua;
- Funding of over
$600,000 for land user initiatives through the Ministry for the Environment's
Sustainable Management Fund, which aims to support the community, iwi
and local government in a range of environmental initiatives, and the
Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry's Sustainable Farming Fund, which
supports projects that will contribute to improving environmental (and
financial) performance of rural communities;
- Funding of $3.2
million for sewerage upgrades in the Rotorua area through the Sanitary
Works Subsidy Scheme administered by the Ministry of Health; and
- Funding a $10 million
research programme, over 10 years, to improve water quality in the Rotorua
Lakes through the Foundation for Research, Science and Technology.
The government is very much committed to continuing to work with the local
councils and iwi to develop medium and longer term plans to address the
water quality problems in the Rotorua lakes. The problems facing the Rotorua
lakes are complex and there is no single or simple solution. Finding solutions
to the problems will rely on a good partnership between central and local
government and the Rotorua community.
Partnership
There is another
partnership that I as Minister of Local Government, consider of great
importance, and which the Lake Okaro Wetland project has shown me the
fruits of. This is local authorities working together in partnership,
and together with local iwi, communities and private individuals, to achieve
such a significant goal.
Now, under the Local
Government Act 2002, local authorities must, among other things, act in
accordance with a number of principles. One of them, which I think is
extremely important to highlight on this occasion, is that councils should
collaborate and co-operate with each other and other bodies to promote
and achieve community well-being. And we can see an impressive example
of the positive results of this commitment to working together today.
Environment Bay of
Plenty and the Rotorua District Council have banded together to protect
and enhance the environmental and cultural qualities of Lake Okaro by
developing one of the largest manmade freshwater wetlands in the Bay of
Plenty region.
I find it encouraging
that these councils, together with the Te Arawa Mäori Trust Board,
have worked together to oversee and take part in the development of the
Rotorua Lakes Protection and Restoration Programme - the aim of which
is to essentially protect, and in some cases improve, the water quality
of all of the Rotorua lakes, including this one.
The two councils
have worked collaboratively on this project and have combined their knowledge
and perspectives to work out what actions were needed to improve the water
quality of the picturesque Lake Okaro, and how best to achieve the results
we see here today.
Iwi, community and
interest groups have all taken part in discussing, and debating options
for improving the water quality of Lake Okaro. The Lake Okaro Action Plan,
of which the construction of the wetland is one of the main actions, is
all the more robust for having this invaluable community and iwi involvement.
I understand that action plans for five of the Rotorua lakes are in various
stages of development, and there are more to come!
On a final note,
I think that recognition must also be made of two individual members of
the Lake Okaro community who - Shane and June Birchall. Without the extremely
generous donation of over two hectares of private land from these two
people, and their contribution throughout the development of the wetland,
it may never have happened - thank you Shane and June.
Conclusion
To conclude ladies
and gentlemen, I believe that the creation of this fantastic new wetland
has highlighted the strengths of the various partnerships between local
government, iwi and communities. I expect that all sections of the Lake
Okaro community, people across the wider region, and indeed New Zealand,
will benefit from this development and from the example it sets.
Please join with
me today in celebrating the official opening of the Lake Okaro Wetland
- It's a day to celebrate working together to protect and improve our
lakes, and to recognise and applaud all of the hard work and dedication
of every single person and organisation involved in making this project
a success. Congratulations again to all of you.
Nö reira, tënä
koutou, tënä koutou
Kia ora tätou katoa
For
further information about World Wetlands Day or the Convention on Wetlands,
please contact the Ramsar Convention Secretariat, Rue Mauverney
28, CH-1196 Gland, Switzerland (tel +41 22 999 0170, fax +41 22 999 0169,
e-mail ).
Posted 3 February 2006, Dwight Peck, Ramsar.
 
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