NZGrower | May 2022

Page 14

YOUR LEVY AT WORK

FRESHWATER FARM PLANS FOR GROWERS ON THE WAIMEA PLAINS Ailsa Robertson : HortNZ team lead environmental policy

Growers with five or more hectares will need a Freshwater Farm Plan (FWFP) over the next few years. National regulation being drafted will give more detail, including where and when plans are required across the country, the minimum content, and who can audit and certify them. The government has indicated the regulation will be finalised at the end of the year. Horticulture New Zealand is advocating for the regulation to recognise GAP (Good Agricultural Practice) assurance programmes to deliver audited and certified FWFPs for our industry.

A credible way for growers to show they are implementing sustainable practices to manage soils, nutrients and irrigation FWFPs will play a role in how Councils manage freshwater resources in their regions. Regional councils must initiate a plan change by the end of 2024 to implement the National Policy Statement for Freshwater (NPSFM) 2020, to set longterm visions for freshwater, new policies and rules, identify limits on resource use, prepare an action plan to achieve the limits within a certain timeframe, and may include conditions on resource consents. Limits on resource use may apply to any activity or land use in that catchment. Tasman District Council is reviewing their existing Tasman Resource Management Plan and will be creating a new ’Tasman Environment Plan’ which will include giving effect to the requirements of the NPSFM 2020 for freshwater management – it is expected to be notified in 2024. On Tasman’s Waimea Plains, HortNZ’s catchment project brings together science, policy and implementation around FWFPs.

As an industry, we can tell a powerful story of growers on a journey of continuous improvement 12  NZGROWER : MAY 2022

Case studies Two grower case studies – of vegetables and apples – are being developed to show how the Environment Management System (EMS) add-on to GAP can deliver credible and robust FWFPs for growers. All growers with five or more hectares on the plains are being supported to develop their first FWFP using the GAP EMS in 2022. HortNZ is also collaborating with Council through a Memorandum of Understanding to agree on the freshwater science and the modelling of horticulture systems on the plains. Through this project, HortNZ intends to build robust evidence on sustainable growing practices to support enabling policies for growers in the new regional plan. The Waimea project also involves testing a new component of FWFPs called the ’catchment context’. This means a growing business will need to consider environmental risks at two scales in their FWFP – property and catchment. As an example, if the priority for a catchment is the management of elevated nitrates in groundwater, growers and farmers will need to show how they are prioritising nitrogen management in their FWFP to best practice standards. Additional regional council requirements will also need to be reflected in FWFPs. For example, an irrigation management plan or an erosion and sediment control plan. NZGAP has created several regional guides, such as the Tasman Regional Guide, to show how growers meet Council requirements using the GAP EMS add-on. FWFPs are a regulatory tool, but they are also a credible way for growers to show they are implementing sustainable practices to manage soils, nutrients and irrigation. A nitrogen budget can show how a grower is accounting for inputs and outputs for each crop and yield, and a nutrient management plan shows a grower’s decision around fertiliser applications at the right rate, right time and right place for each crop. As an industry, we can tell a powerful story of growers on a journey of continuous improvement, through aggregated and audited FWFP data. To find out more about starting your FWFP now using the GAP EMS add-on, visit NZGAP’s website https://www.nzgap.co.nz/.


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Articles inside

Fruitfed Supplies – Growing Talent in the Horticultural Industry

5min
pages 74-76

AdvanceQuip add CASE H Series Rough Terrain Forklifts to Range

2min
page 70

Heat and Control – Industry Favourite for Fresh Cuts Levels Up

2min
page 71

Netropolitan – Waste Not Want Not

1min
page 73

Potatoes NZ Inc

9min
pages 64-67

Process Vegetables NZ Inc

3min
page 61

TomatoesNZ Inc

3min
pages 62-63

December Deadline for Free Trades Training Applications

2min
pages 52-54

Waimea Community Dam update

4min
pages 50-51

Heat on greenhouse growers

7min
pages 32-34

New Scholarship Recipient Takes on Endophytes

2min
pages 48-49

Rising costs concern the country’s vegetable growers

8min
pages 42-45

Four views from would-be Auckland mayors on Pukekohe

4min
pages 46-47

Gisborne growers hit by trio of massive rain events

10min
pages 28-31

Plants can help reduce emissions and chemical use

6min
pages 38-41

Growing pressure on covered crop operations

5min
pages 35-37

Campaigns and schemes increase appeal of work in horticulture

4min
pages 26-27

Flexible working conditions enhance industry’s appeal

4min
pages 20-21

Greater irrigation accuracy

4min
pages 22-23

Natural resources and environment

3min
page 9

Freshwater Farm Plans for growers on the Waimea Plains

3min
pages 14-16

President’s Word: The positives in change

6min
pages 4-5

The Chief Executive: Planning and working towards a

4min
pages 6-8

Environment Canterbury decision provides consenting pathway for vegetables

4min
pages 12-13

A guide to New Zealand’s biosecurity system

5min
pages 10-11
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