A group of Maniototo women is preparing to step up its campaign against Labour's proposed water policy, saying a royalty on irrigation water would be the "theft of a fair return" on decades of farmer investment.
Puketoi Station farmer Emma Crutchley said "Water Maniototo" had had a soft launch on its Facebook page about 12 days ago and had this week released a video portraying a "positive image" of Maniototo farming and showing a water royalty would be unjust.
At 2c per 1000 litres it would cost Maniototo farmers about $2million a year - part of a wider $6million loss for Central Otago predicted by the Otago Water Rights Users Group, Miss Crutchley said.
She said Maniototo farmers were "gutted" about the proposal as feared they could be forced to either sell irrigation shares; sell their family farm - possibly to corporate owners - and move somewhere with higher rainfall; or convert to a more intensive land use such as dairy farming.
This is because it would only be corporate dairy farm owners who could absorb the irrigation royalty, and so the policy would be counterproductive, in fact forcing the intensified farming.