I
was not aware until very recently that we had this shit.
The Canterbury I was brought up in with its sheep and 'mixed' farms is DEAD.
This is a disgrace.
The Canterbury I was brought up in with its sheep and 'mixed' farms is DEAD.
This is a disgrace.
Massive NZ feedlot non-compliant for months
New Zealand's only large-scale American style feedlot has been "technically non-compliant" for three months but is yet to be fined or prosecuted.
10
October, 2018
The
Five Star Beef feedlot in Ashburton, owned by ANZCO, can farm up to
19,000 cattle on less than one square kilometre.
It
has been there since 1991 and has been required to submit an report
to Environment Canterbury (ECan) since at least 2005.
But
its 2017 report was missing several key measures.
ECan's
Ashburton zone lead Janine Holland said: "Annual volumes of
manure they're applying per hectare and its location on site,
groundwater quality, monitoring of bores, and current and proposed
management practices for the feedlot."
Ms Holland, despite having intimate knowledge of the feedlot's consent, said she didn't know why Five Star Beef had omitted the data.
The
feedlot was widely criticised earlier this year, particularly by
animal welfare groups, as having no place in a clean, green New
Zealand.
Ms
Holland described the feedlot as "technically
non-compliant" because
she said there was no evidence of environmental non-compliance.
However,
there could be environmental non-compliance in the yet-to-be reported
data.
Victoria
University ecologist and senior researcher Mike Joy said red flag
should come up when such a report made its way to a compliance
officer's desk.
"What's
completely lacking in the report is any methodology. Any freshwater
scientist who looked at it would just walk away shaking their head
going, 'We don't know what's happening here'.
"This
report is so lacking in detail we can't be sure what's happening."
It
is now known how the data is measured.
ECan
does not do its own identical tests to ensure the feedlot's
self-reported data is accurate.
"The
onus is on the consent holder to prove their compliance. It's a user
pays system," Ms Holland said.
"We've
got nearly 20,000 consents that we monitor across Canterbury."
Mr
Joy said the feedlot's water bore samples were in excess of guideline
values and several did not meet World Health Organisation limits for
drinking water.
"So
you could glean a little from it, but you could drive a truck through
the gaps in the methodology."
There
were repeated instances of copy-paste mistakes in the 2017
environmental report Five Star Beef provided to ECan. Some were very
basic - the 2017 report's contents incorrectly read "2016".
The Five Star Beef feedlot is the biggest in New Zealand. Photo: Supplied / SAFE
Last
year the feedlot's effluent pond overflowed in July, breaching its
consent conditions. No enforcement action was taken.
Instead
ECan made changes to the feedlot's conditions to allow it to happen
again.
"It's
a temporary measure, part of the action plan that we're undertaking
with Five Star Beef, which will be reviewed in December this year."
Mr
Joy said that response is "indicative of a council that's not
taking environmental issues around freshwater seriously".
Ms
Holland said her team preferred to "work with" consent
holders rather than issue penalties for non-compliance.
"We're
working through remediating the data omissions and the other
information that we need, and sorting those things within an
appropriate time frame.
"And
then we will be able to identify whether we need to take any further
action."
ANZCO
declined to be interviewed but in a statement its general manager of
livestock and agriculture Grant Buntin, disputed ECan's version of
events.
"This
monitoring was addressed, and subsequent sample results were shown to
be within consent parameters.
"Despite
occurring in 2017 and being rectified, the non-compliance notice
remains in place for a full calendar year and will expire at the end
of 2018."
Why human extinction can't come soon enough
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