Mayfield-Hinds-Valetta consent judicial review

Find out about the Environmental Law Initiative’s (ELI) application for judicial review of our decisions relating to the granting of Mayfield-Hinds-Valetta Water Limited’s (MHV) irrigation scheme discharge permit.

Current status: High Court decision delivered on 1 September 2025. Appeal lodged by ELI on 29 September 2025.

What has been reviewed

ELI sought review of our decisions in relation to MHV’s discharge permit to:

High Court decision

The High Court dismissed the application for judicial review. It confirmed the Council’s long-held position that our decisions on resource consent applications are irrevocable final decisions that cannot be substantively re-examined by us.

The Canterbury Land and Water Regional Plan (LWRP) sets a framework by which resource consents for farming activities and nutrient discharges can be considered in areas with degraded water quality. These frameworks vary depending on where the activity occurs, in this case, the Hinds/Hekeao area covered by Plan Change 2 to the LWRP Change 2 - Hinds

The High Court decided that section 107 of the RMA (as it was at the time of the decision) did not allow for reductions in the discharge of contaminants to happen over time where the discharge, either by itself or in combination with other discharges, was likely to give rise to significant adverse effects on aquatic life.

The MHV decision relates to the Hinds/Hekeao Plains part of the Ashburton sub-region, so it is subject to a different planning framework than the Ashburton Lyndhurst Irrigation Ltd (ALIL) consent judicial review.

Unlike the ALIL permit, the MHV permit was not quashed by the High Court and returned to an independent hearing commissioner for further decision. Read the full decision

Next steps: The parties had until 29 September 2025 to decide whether they wished to lodge an appeal. ELI has lodged an appeal.

Law change

Following the High Court decision in ALIL, Parliament amended section 107 of the RMA to allow for the granting of a discharge permit, or a coastal permit, that may allow for significant adverse effects on aquatic life, if a council is satisfied that the conditions of the permit will contribute to a reduction of the effects over the duration of the permit.

Effect of the law change

Section 107 is now aligned with the LWRP approach to phasing out degraded water quality over time while supporting the social, economic and cultural wellbeing of communities.