Timeline of the Central Plains Water Enhancement Scheme
This is a timeline of the Central Plains Water Enhancement Scheme.
The Central Plains Water Enhancement Scheme is a proposed water diversion, damming and water reticulation and irrigation scheme for the Canterbury Plains of New Zealand.
;1999 – Beginning26 April – the Christchurch City Council adopts the 1999 Annual Plan. The plan budgeted $150,000 for a 'Feasibility Study for Central Plains Irrigation'.13 September – Christchurch City Council approved setting up a joint steering committee with Selwyn District Council, to be called the 'Central Plains Irrigation Steering Committee'.
;2000 – Steering committee14 February – the terms of reference were approved by Christchurch City Council and Denis O'Rourke was appointed to the committee.24 March – Doug Marsh, Jack Searle, John Donkers, Willie Palmer and Doug Catherwood were appointed to the committee.July – Doug Marsh is elected as chairman of the steering committee. The council staff supporting the committee are Walter Lewthwaite, Allan Watson, Bruce Henderson and Eddie Thomas.18 December – the steering committee engages URS New Zealand Limited, a subsidiary of URS Corp., to carry out the feasibility study.
;2001 – Scoping studies
- 13 July – URS New Zealand Ltd are to carry out the third phase of the feasibility study for $NZ374,300 excluding GST.6 December – URS New Zealand Ltd applied to Canterbury Regional Council on behalf of the two councils and the Ashburton Community Water Trust, for a resource consent to take water from the Waimakariri River and Rakaia River.
- 21 November – the Christchurch City Council approves the use of a trust to hold the resource consents for the scheme.
;2004 – CPW Ltd and share prospectus16 September – Central Plains Water Limited issues a share prospectus to raise funds to pay for applications for resource consents.
;2005 – Applications for resource consents12 May – Central Plains Water Limited confirms GHD Limited as project manager, Buddle Findlay as legal adviser, URS New Zealand Limited as technical adviser and Deloittes as financial adviser.23 November – the consent applications for the use of water for irrigation and associated land uses are lodged with Environment Canterbury.24 November – Central Plains Water Limited is given requiring authority status by the Minister for the Environment, meaning it may apply to the Minister of Land Information to compulsorily acquire private land.
;2006 and 2007 – Notification of applications12 June – applications for resource consents for land use are lodged with Selwyn District Council.24 June – public notification of 55 applications for resource consents lodged with Environment Canterbury.
;20075 May – a further 10 resource consent applications for a ten kilometre tunnel are notified by Environment Canterbury.5 July – the Christchurch City Council allows Central Plains Water Limited to borrow up to $4.8 million from Dairy Holdings Limited.1 August – Central Plains Water Trust asks for the consent hearing to be deferred to February 2008.13 August – the Christchurch medical officer of health, Alistair Humphrey, commented that the downstream social and health concerns of the scheme were being largely overlooked in the haste to promote the $350 million irrigation scheme.
;2008 – Hearings
- 25 February – hearings for the scheme, which has had 1200 submissions, began in Christchurch.
- 25 September – the hearings finish.
- 3 April – Hearing Panel indicates they are unlikely to grant CPW the dam consents.
- 11 May – the hearing resumes to decide whether to consider granting water takes and water races.
- 20 May – hearing evidence from CPW will resume on 5 October 2009.