Moves to prepare for the shelving of the controversial Ruataniwha Water Storage Scheme could be taken by the Hawke's Bay Regional Council, in light of the recent Supreme Court land swap decision.
Last week the Supreme Court found the Minister of Conservation acted illegally by trying to make 22 hectares of Ruahine Forest Park available for exchange to the Hawke's Bay Regional Investment Company Ltd (HBRIC) for the $330 million project.
The land swap would have allowed the Ruahine Forest Park land to be flooded to create Ruataniwha Water Storage Scheme, the largest irrigation project in the country.
Although there were two possible avenues which could allow the swap to go ahead in future, in the short term the decision appears to have dealt a short-term blow to the scheme's progress.
At a meeting today, the council's environment and services committee will be asked to make a number of recommendations about staff's work on the RWSS - including suspending some of the work staff have begun to meet revised conditions precedent.