Stench from Christchurch's Wastewater Treatment Plant continues to affect communities. We have told Christchurch City Council to take action.
Providing authorisations
Resource consents, permits and other authorisations are key mechanisms for delivering environmental protection. They:
- Contribute to environmental, economic, social and cultural outcomes for Waitaha Canterbury by ensuring that rules and regulations designed to protect the environment and cultural values are translated into practice while allowing economic activity to continue
- Act as a contract between the holder, the community and Environment Canterbury as the consenting authority
- Are a resource user’s licence to operate and set out the conditions they must adhere to.
This service includes Resource Management Act 1991 (RMA) consenting, gravel permits, and building consents for large dams (a dam that has a height of four or more metres and holds 20,000 or more cubic metres of water (or other liquid)).
The measures focus on RMA resource consent applications as this is the majority of our work in authorisations, with 1,500-2,200 applications received each year.
How are we tracking on our service measures?
Target: 95% or more
How we are doing: 79.2%
Target: Ratio ≥1
How we are doing: Ratio of 1.23, up from 1.06 at the end of quarter one
Target: 90% or more
How we are doing: The audit will be undertaken in quarter four
More information
Service measure 2, which tracks our compliance with processing consent applications within statutory timeframes, has an increased target of 95% for 2025/26 (up from 50% in 2024/25). At the end of quarter two, 79.2% of consents decided met the statutory timeframe. This result gives a skewed view of current performance as it is affected by a number of longstanding consents that are in independent decision-making processes outside of the control of this regional council. Given the expected volume of applications for the January to June period and the number of independently controlled consents still to be resolved, it will not be possible to achieve the target of 95% by 30 June 2026. This result for the year-to-date reflects several consent decisions relating to consent applications that were lodged some time ago and have already missed the statutory deadlines, bringing the overall percentage of decisions within the statutory timeframe down.
For consent applications within control of our consent team (those lodged since 1 January 2025), 90.3% have been processed within the statutory timeframes, meaning that most applicants are receiving decisions in a timely manner.
Recent highlights and updates
Seven years of FEP audit data shows improved environmental performance across water quality, irrigation and compliance in Canterbury.
Learn how rural and semi-rural wastewater treatment systems work, when resource consent is needed, and how to maintain onsite systems to protect water quality.