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New dam safety regulations

New rules will provide a nationally consistent approach to dam safety

Until now, New Zealand was one of the few countries in the OECD that did not have an operative dam safety framework. The lack of a consistent framework posed a risk to people, property and the environment.

The regulations will come into effect in May 2024, and once in force dam owners will have a further 1-2 years to undertake the necessary work to classify their dam and put in place a dam safety assurance programme.

“From 13 May 2024, the owners of dams that meet the height and volume requirements will need to confirm the potential risk their dam poses, put in place safety plans and undertake regular dam inspections,”says Amy Moorhead, Manager Building Policy at MBIE.

“This will help to ensure that an essential part of New Zealand’s infrastructure remains safe and reliable.

“The new regulatory framework will reduce the likelihood of dam failures which have the potential to cause significant harm a great distance downstream.”

Dams that fall within the scope of the regulations will be given a potential impact classification based on their potential to cause harm in the event of failure.

Medium and high potential impact dams will be required to have a dam safety assurance programme. These dams will be required have regular monitoring and surveillance practices in place for the safe operation of dams.

Low potential impact dams will have no ongoing requirements except for their initial classifications and then regular classification reviews every five years.

“Most small farm dams and ponds and weirs will be excluded from the regulatory framework as they are unlikely to meet the minimum size or storage volume thresholds,” says Moorhead.

Engineering New Zealand Te Ao Rangahau is developing a programme for assessing and registering Recognised Engineers.

Recognised Engineers will be required to determine potential impact classifications and to certify and audit dam safety assurance programmes. Those engineers who complete the relevant assessment requirements will be able to conduct these tasks.

The new dam safety regulations also require dam owners to review their dams against flood performance criteria every five years as part of a comprehensive safety review.

“Our understanding of the effects of climate change is continuing to improve with time. We want to ensure the new safety provisions remain fit for purpose in a changing environment,” says Moorhead.

The regulations will apply to dams that are: • 4 metres or higher with a volume of 20,000m3 (8 Olympicsized swimming pools) or greater, or • 1 metre or higher with a volume of 40,000m3 (16 Olympic-sized swimming pools) or greater.

Guidance for dam owners is available on the Building Performance website.

June - JuLY 2022 SiteRight – It’s the right fit for your business

Site Safe is excited to announce the rebrand of Site Safe Reviews to SiteRight - an enhanced take on site reviews.

SiteRight is designed to provide your business with the assurance that the right health and safety practices are in place.

SiteRight reviews, which some clients like to refer to as audits, will continue to be delivered by expert safety advisors across New Zealand and powered by the ecoPortal platform.

Site Safe worked with the industry to deliver improvements that will best meet their needs.

This includes providing clients with their own online user-friendly and personalised dashboard to find and manage all their review information, an improved set of review questions, accurate and anonymous benchmarking of your performance against similar projects and types of companies and Safety Improvement reports are included for follow up and documenting close out of corrective actions.

Users also benefit from a scoring structure which highlights any concerning observations relating to high-risk activities whilst at the same time knowing that they will have been made safe whilst the auditor remained on-site.

SiteRight provides peace of mind when engaging with staff, contractors and management. Completing a review not only measures level of compliance, but also provides evidence of due diligence and peace of mind that everything is working as it should.

Woolworth’s New Zealand has been receiving reviews for about seven years.

Head of construction, Rob Jones, said he was “glad” the advisors auditing safety were overseeing projects from a “fresh set of eyes”. "I don't want to hear just the good news you know I want to hear the bad news but I have been seeing reports recently of a couple of jobs that have been coming in at 65 per cent opposed to 90 so I'm glad to see that when it is actually a low score that [way] we can address it.”

SiteRight was a “useful” tool and having external reviewers viewing their live construction projects provided “comfort” to both himself and the health and safety department, Jones said.

“The reports are very useful from my point of view and Woolworths having the knowledge that we have all our construction projects reviewed monthly is certainly of comfort to me.”

It also helped Woolworths with “raising awareness of safety” and reaching their goals to zero harm in the workplace, he said.

“They’ve got this external sort of independent audit happening on a monthly basis which I think it … just keeps [health and safety] front of mind for the live construction project and all those supervisors.

You can find more about SiteRight’s many enhancements and how to request a review here.

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