The Auckland-based seabed sand mining company McCallum Bros is applying for two new resource consents to mine the sand off Pakiri Beach. These would allow for the continuation of seabed sand mining allowed off Pakiri/Te Arai Beach immediately adjacent to the south side of the Northland/Auckland boundary.
The two applications seek to continue sand mining in the shallow 5m to 10m deep 'in-shore' area very close to the beach and in the 'mid-shore' area between 15m and 25m deep – for up to 35 years, contrasting with the 14-year duration of now-expired consents for doing so. The 'in-shore' take would be up to 76,000cu m annually, the 'mid-shore' 150,000cu m.
The applications are for seabed sand mining across 9sq km of seabed along about 10km of Pakiri/Te Arai coastline. The mining is allowed only as far north as the Northland/Auckland border.
The Northland/Auckland boundary runs out from the land into the sea in a north-easterly direction from roughly the base of Mangawhai spit. Seabed sand dredging is allowed on the Auckland side of the border only.
NRC's submission said there was potential for cross-boundary effects.
NRC said it was important any potential cross-boundary effects were addressed and Mangawhai spit protected from adverse effects.
Kaipara District Council's submission said Mangawhai Harbour, Mangawhai Estuary and Mangawhai Heads were at risk of exposure to the coastal elements should the spit's protection disappear or decrease.
"KDC opposes the two applications for sand extraction within the Mangawhai-Pakiri embayment … Opposition is in full and pertains to actual or perceived adverse effects on the Mangawhai sandspit morphology, wildlife habitat of nationally critical or vulnerable bird species, as well as on the local Mangawhai community," the KDC submission said.
NRC said the effects of climate change and associated increase in storm severity, frequency and sea-level rise meant Mangawhai Harbour and sandspit were already facing significant threats.
Sea-level rise was likely to exacerbate the risk of erosion.
NRC said there was conflicting opinion on whether removal of sand from the extraction zones played a role in starving the spit of sand that would otherwise replenish it and potentially allow it to increase in size. A precautionary approach was therefore required.
It said work on the potential impact of changes to coastal processes resulting from the sand mining had not been done to the same standard for the area north of the Northland/Auckland regional boundary.
NRC said a 1km buffer zone should be established if sand dredging proceeded.
"Northland Regional Council has received complaints to do with dredging occurring outside the consent boundary."
NRC said any resource consent granted for sand mining needed a consent duration "in line with" the 14 years granted in previous consenting – not the 35 years requested by the applicant.