The Bay of Plenty Regional Council will start visiting dairy farms this month to ensure they are compliant with their dairy discharge consents.
In 2014/15, it monitored 290 dairy shed consents and found 74 per cent complied with consent conditions at the first visit while 9 per cent had a serious non-compliance noted. In total, seven abatement notices and 11 infringements were issued and no prosecutions.
This compared with 343 dairy shed consents monitored in 2013/14 when 70 per cent of consents complied at the first visit. In total, 13 per cent of consents had a serious non-compliance noted at the first visit but 23 abatement notices and 14 infringements were issued. One serious case resulted in a recommendation to prosecute.
Pollution prevention team leader Steve Pickles said it visited 53 fewer farms last season because it operated a risk-based monitoring programme, where higher risk systems were inspected more frequently than lower risk systems.
"Basically, the programme allows for compliance visits to be made on one-, two- or three-yearly frequencies, depending on the compliance history and the risk of the effluent disposal system for each farm. As sites can be re-graded after each season, the number of farms inspected differs every year."