Our Council » Plans, strategies, and policies » Strategies, plans, policies, reports, and studies A - Z » State of the Environment reports
The Council is required by law to monitor the state of the Nelson environment. It is considered good practice to publicly report on the results of that monitoring.
Beginning in 1999 and through 2004, the Council each year produced a State of the Environment report covering a selected topic such as air quality, coastal resources or freshwater. You can find the highlights of the annual reports here along with summaries and full reports available for download.
The 2003 State of the Environment Report was Nelson's last in a cycle that started in 1999. In 2004 the cycle repeats.
The State of the Environment 1999: General Report and 2000: Land Issues are not available online. Please contact the Environmental Policy unit at Council on +64 3 546 0200.
The air quality section includes:
The noise section includes:
Download the State of the Environment Report 2001 (PDF @ 2.1MB).
The first ‘rules’ in New Zealand for water use were developed by Māori communities to prevent spiritual and physical pollution of sites of significance along with food-gathering areas. In the first century of European settlement there was more concern with controlling the quantities of water, particularly flood water, than with worrying about its quality. By the 1950s, however, the effects of sewage, industrial discharges and agricultural runoff were obvious in many rivers and streams. In the following decades of growing environmental awareness, concern about water quality became more widespread.
Now, under the Resource Management Act 1991, the value of waterways and the aquatic life must be considered for their own sake along with management of the water for a wide range of human uses and values including drinking water, household use, recreation and industry.
Extensive monitoring has been carried out to assess the health of Nelson City’s waterways, and the results of this monitoring work forms the basis for the Council’s fresh water management provisions. The chapter titled ‘fresh water quality in the Nelson region’ shows that many of the main streams running through Nelson City are degraded and not an ideal environment to sustain biological life. Nelson’s most impacted waterways are generally small streams in Stoke, Bishopdale, Atawhai and The Glen.
Download the State of the Environment Report 2002 (PDF @ 2.4MB).
Tahunanui Beach is a Nelson icon, but it is just one feature of a coastline that stretches from Cape Soucis almost to Rabbit Island. This coast includes Delaware, a bay of great importance to local iwi; the Boulder Bank, an internationally significant landscape feature and Port Nelson, an economically vital industrial area.
As a highly used and highly modified coast, it is important we know how this area is holding up in environmental terms. The Council has just released the State of the Environment Report for 2003, on the Nelson coastline.
This section of the report departs from the coastline to include river swimming pools, reporting on the results of the last five years bathing water quality results. Monaco and Tahunanui Beach are looking good, but there are other areas of concern including Cable Bay and the lower pools in the Maitai River. In spite of talks with locals at Cable Bay, the occasional poor readings there remain a mystery. In respect of the Maitai, Council staff have taken steps such as testing septic tanks and speaking with local farmers about stock grazing in the lower valley. Newspaper reports over summer have highlighted this issue, with the most recent tests giving an OK for swimming in both Girlies and Sunday Holes.
A Waimea Inlet Survey by Cawthron Institute (supported by Nelson City and Tasman District Councils) is part of a Sustainable Management Fund project to develop monitoring protocols for important estuarine environments. It shows some remedial action is needed where chemicals are leaching from contaminated soils, and also that the invasive pacific oyster is well established. On the brighter side, the effluent discharge from Bells Island has a minimal enrichment effect and spartina has been effectively eradicated without harming habitats.
Like most beaches this is a dynamic system with periods of erosion and periods of growth. Recent monitoring and a reassessment of some earlier data shows that current beach levels are lower than in 1982, but similar to 1958 levels at either end of the beach. In the centre of the front beach, levels are the highest recorded since surveys began. The Coast Care programme is stabilising the central section of the beach with planting and sand trapping.
Monitoring programmes reveal:
A long term monitoring programme in cooperation with Port Nelson Ltd is now in place.
There has been some progress with a taiapure established at Delaware Bay, recognising the area as of special significance to iwi. However, a decision on the proposed North Nelson Marine Reserve is still waiting for approval by Central Government.
Local iwi and Council staff are working on a joint project to develop traditional indicators for priority natural resources in Nelson. Once developed, these will be used alongside scientific indicators in State of the Environment reports. The first stage of this project, a Tangata Whenua World View Statement, has been completed. Work is now underway on developing indicators for freshwater using the Maitahi (Maitai) as a case study.
Download the State of the Environment Report 2003 (PDF @ 3.8MB).
The State of the Environment Report 2004 reviews what we know about the state of our environment in light of the environmental outcomes we anticipate in our planning documents. Council's monitoring of the environment since 1999 has aimed to discover what kind of shape our resources are in and why. Two pieces of legislation introduced in the early 2000s, the Local Government Act 2002 and the Resource Management Amendment Act 2003, require Council to compile and make available to the public, at a maximum of five yearly intervals, a review of the results of its monitoring. This report presents a full review of the years 1999 - 2004.
Download the State of the Environment Report 2004 (PDF @ 3.8MB)