The Government's Provincial Growth Fund (PGF) has given Northland the go-ahead to look at water storage to unlock land use potential. It will invest up to $18.5 million to help investigate and – if feasible – construct community-scale water storage and use options in Kaipara and the Mid-North.
Regional Economic Development Minister Shane Jones says this project is the largest PGF investment to date in water storage. The proposal was backed because of the "real opportunities that ensuring a more reliable water supply could bring to the region – up to $150m in increased horticulture earnings per year and up to 1150 jobs created."
This is part of the $3b the PGF is investing over three years to 'build a regional economy that is sustainable, inclusive and productive'.
Northland regional councillor Justin Blaikie (Hokianga-Kaikohe) says recent studies that have been co-funded by the council and central government have already shown investing in water storage in the Mid-North and Kaipara could create hundreds of jobs and significantly boost the economy.
Despite Northland's relatively high rainfall, a lack of storage means it can't be harvested for use in summer and during the droughts that have affected the region recently. Only a small portion of the region is irrigated – and most of it for horticulture – by two 1980s-built irrigation schemes at Kerikeri and Maungatapere.