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Appendix A: Public Notices
National Environmental Standards Ministry for the Environment
(Published in the Waikato Times, Otago Daily Times, Southland Times, New Zealand Herald, Bay of Plenty Times, Christchurch Press and Wellington Dominion.)
In accordance with section 44 of the Resource Management Act (1991), the Minister for the Environment gives notice of her intention to develop national environmental standards (regulations) on the following subject matter:
- Ambient air quality standards for the following priority contaminants:
particles (PM10), carbon monoxide, nitrogen dioxide,
sulphur dioxide and ozone.
For each priority contaminant the proposed
ambient air quality standards will include: a concentration limit,
an allowable number of times per year that this concentration
can be exceeded, an absolute maximum concentration limit for
the exceedances that triggers enforcement action, and a monitoring
method.
These regulations aim to: improve the consistency and
certainty with which discharges into New Zealand's air are managed,
to safeguard the life supporting capacity of air, and to avoid,
remedy or mitigate adverse effects of activities on the environment
and people's health and wellbeing.
- Ban the following activities:
deliberate burning of refuse at landfills, burning of tyres
in the open, burning of coated wire
in the open, burning of bitumen for road maintenance purposes,
burning of oil in the open, and new high temperature hazardous
waste incinerators.
Require resource consents for the following
activities, by 2008: school and hospital low temperature incinerators.
These
regulations will avoid significant adverse effects caused by
these activities on the environment and people's health, and
assist in safeguarding the life-supporting capacity of air.
- Emission
design standard for wood and coal burning appliances in houses
in urban areas. This design standard means that any new
appliances installed into buildings within urban areas must be
identical to a unit that is tested in accordance with AS/NZS
4013:1999 entitled 'Domestic solid fuel burning appliances -
Method for determination
of flue gas emission' and meets an average emissions limit of
1.5 g of particle per kilogram of fuel burned. The emission limit
requirement
in the standard supersedes the emission limit of 4 g/kg specified
in AS/NZS 4013:1999.
This regulation will assist in remedying
and mitigating the potential adverse health and environmental
effects caused by emissions from new, small heating appliances.
- Requirement
for the collection and destruction of landfill gas, unless
surface methane emissions levels are below a specified emission
rate. This standard requires operating municipal waste landfills
with a total capacity of over 1 million tonnes to install a landfill
gas collection and destruction system (eg, landfill gas flaring)
unless they can demonstrate that methane surface emissions are
less than 1% methane (by volume in air).
This regulation will
assist in avoiding methane emissions resulting from the disposal
of solid waste.
Further details on these proposals can be viewed at the Ministry for the Environment, 84 Boulcott Street, Wellington and at www.mfe.govt.nz.
Any person can make a submission on the proposed national environmental standards. The submission must be dated, signed by you and include the following information:
- Your name and postal address, phone number, fax number and
email address (if applicable).
- Details of the standard in respect
of which you are making the
submission.
- Whether you support or oppose the standard.
- Your submission,
with reasons.
- Any changes you would like made to the proposed
standard, if any.
- The decision you wish the Minister for the
Environment to make.
You must forward your submission to the Ministry for the Environment, PO Box 10-362, Wellington, or by email to standards@mfe.govt.nz in time to be received no later than 5 pm on Friday 5 December 2003.
National environmental standards are regulations prescribed by the Governor-General, by Order in Council. For further details on the relevant statutory provisions refer to section 43 and 44 of the Resource Management Act, 1991.
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