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environment, indigenous rights, personhood rights,. river, energy, ecosystem



Saving the Whanganui: can personhood rescue a river?

Adam Daniel wades waist deep through the glassy water. Pumice stones spiral in the shallow eddy, while the shrill whistles of a male whio (blue duck) echo upstream through the green canyon walls. The mountain stream’s deep current slows around a lone tree standing on a small rocky island before rushing toward the sea.

Like a doctor, Daniel spends the morning checking the pulse of the river’s upper arteries, taking temperature readings and drawing water samples to diagnose its vitality. Thirty kilometres to his south-east, the Whanganui River’s pristine headwaters begin in the internationally renowned Tongariro National Park, on the western flanks of three cone volcanoes, Ruapehu, Tongariro and Ngauruhoe.

From there the river carves through two national parks, a national forest, farmland, two large towns and many smaller communities on its journey 260km to the south, where it empties into the Tasman Sea.

But the body of water flowing past Daniel is more than a geographical feature. Granted personhood in 2017 by an act of the New Zealand parliament, the Whanganui is the first river in the world to be recognised as an indivisible and living being.

The Māori tribes that live along the Whanganui have always seen the river as sacred – its waters have nourished and blessed the people throughout the 700 years they have lived beside it. The law set in motion new intentions to uphold the mana (prestige) and mauri (life force) of the river.

This river is our river. It is all of ours, and how we look after it belongs to all of us.


Whanganui elder John Maihi


Yet despite the river’s new legal status, it still faces challenges from farming and forestry to dams and development. And Daniel – a biologist charged with monitoring river habitat health – is troubled with recent temperature and clarity readings.

The river is sick, and he needs to know where the illness begins.

Defining the river’s rights














The Whanganui River as seen from above




The Whanganui River as seen from a drone. The Māori tribes that live along the waterway have always seen it as sacred. Photograph: Jeremy Lugio/The Guardian


Spring rain cascades down the Ngapuwaiwaha Marae’s decorative roofline in Taumarunui, the first large town the Whanganui River meets. Hundreds gather at 8am to celebrate the river, the new act and the inauguration of the two people selected to speak on behalf of the river: Dame Tariana Turia, an influential Māori political leader, and Turama Hawira, an experienced Māori advisor and educator.

Visitors await the powhiri, a ritual welcoming people to the marae, a fenced-in complex of carved buildings belonging to a particular tribe.

As the rain subsides, Gerrard Albert steps up to the microphone. He is one in a long line of leaders who have fought for recognition of their deep relationship to the river since the 1840 signing of the Treaty of Waitangi, New Zealand’s founding document. He address the crowd in Māori and then in English.

“The settlement legislation recognises Te Awa Tupua as this: a living and indivisible whole comprising the Whanganui River from the mountains to the sea, incorporating its tributaries and all its physical and metaphysical elements,” Albert says. “For the first time, a framework stems from the intrinsic spiritual values of an indigenous belief system.”

When the New Zealand parliament passed the Te Awa Tupua Act granting the Whanganui River system legal personhood, the decision sent waves across the globe, settling the longest water dispute in the nation’s history and establishing a unique legal framework rooted in the Māori worldview of the Whanganui tribes, who revere the river as a tupuna, or ancestor.

The law begins by recognising the river as an indivisible and living being called Te Awa Tupua and outlines four core principles from the tribes’ perspective, including their inalienable connection to the river. Then, it states this being “has all the rights, powers, duties and liabilities of a legal person”.

Tom Barraclough, a legal researcher and expert on the Te Awa Tupua law, says the legislation will give tribes “significant influence” over the future of the river. “As a consequence of giving iwi greater rights, there may be greater protection for nature.”

Dr Erin O’Donnell, a senior fellow at the University of Melbourne law school and author of a book on river rights, agrees. “The act shifts us away from this resource construction where we ask, ‘what do we want from the river?’ and into a space where we can say, ‘what do we want for the river and how do we get there with the river?’”

Over the course of six months, the Guardian travelled the Whanganui to investigate the impact of the new protections – and good intentions.












Moss on a rock along the Whanganui




Moss on a rock along the Whanganui. Photograph: Jeremy Lugio/The Guardian


“You are defining, essentially, the river’s rights,” Albert says.“It puts the river at the centre of the picture and asks us to organise around it.”

This view isn’t unique in the larger legal framework of New Zealand. In 2014, New Zealand gave the same rights to a former national park, Te Urewera, and soon after Mount Taranaki as well.

The trend has also taken hold outside the country. In February 2019, citizens of Toledo, Ohio, granted legal rights to Lake Erie – a fight that began after a 2014 toxic algae bloom shut down city water for three days. India recognised the Ganges and Yamuna rivers as legal entities in 2017, but those rights were overturned. In July 2019, Bangladesh joined suit and granted all of its rivers this same status. And in September the Yurok Tribe in California granted personhood to the Klamath River.

But it’s unclear whether it will work. In the case of Te Awa Tupua, the hard work lies downstream, where the river and its branches encounter development, farming, forestry and run-off which challenge its health and ecology.

Water woes are not unique to the Whanganui River - similar concerns exist across the country. A 600-page Waitangi Tribunal report released last August criticised the government’s Resource Management Act for allowing “a serious degradation of water to occur in many ancestral water bodies”. It highlighted the government’s failure to recognise Māori rights and interests in water. It recommends sweeping changes for both.


Today, those gathered in Taumarunui are celebrating the first step, as the two voices of the river begin meeting with the communities along it to build a strategy that addresses the body of water as an indivisible whole. However, Albert says the law will take years to have an impact.

A fine balance














Shallows along the Whanganui




Despite the Whanganui’s new legal status, it still faces challenges from farming and forestry to dams and development. Photograph: Jeremy Lugio/The Guardian


Near the river’s source at Tongariro National Park, Dave Pickett looks below the surface of the Mangatepopo Stream with a bathyscope. Knee deep in the swift current of this Whanganui tributary, he measures small bugs and algae life clinging to the river bottom, one gauge of a river’s health. He shouts numbers to his colleague.

The men are conducting ecology assessments for Genesis Energy, the company that operates the Tongariro Power Scheme that provides 4% of New Zealand’s energy. The hydropower system diverts the water of the Whanganui River and five of its upper tributaries, including the Mangatepopo. Pickett surveys the stream’s health above and below an intake structure which draws 75% of the water, leaving 25% to flow back into the river. The intake is just outside the park, 15km from the stream’s source and 15km from its confluence with the Whanganui.

The contractors join Campbell Speedy, the environmental coordinator and ecologist working for Genesis. He knows bugs, fish, ecology and the watershed. And he understands the environmental impacts of energy development and the complex cultural landscape of the river.

“This landscape behind us here is Tongariro National Park,” Speedy says. “It’s got dual world heritage status, not only for its volcanic landscape but for its cultural landscape. The water’s coming off a pristine environment. It doesn’t get much better than what we’re seeing right here.”

But like Daniel, Speedy knows the river faces complex issues downstream.

New Zealand’s clean, green image has been mired with reports signalling major water quality issues in many of its rivers. In particular, water quality data from the National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research shows the lower Whanganui River is often badly contaminated with fecal bacteria and fine sediment from extensive farming on its steep slopes and on the slopes of many of its tributaries.

In addition to these threats, many point the finger at hydropower.

Since the 1970s the power scheme has harnessed energy from these rivers, often leaving the river beds dry below the intakes. In 2004, when Genesis was granted rights to use this water for 35 more years, it came with stipulations requiring the company to keep a certain amount of water in the Whanganui and Mangatepopo. The minimum flows were set to a level to maximise whio food production and food access. Speedy says this aimed to improve the ecology of the Mangatepopo stream and the Whanganui River – leading to healthy levels of bugs and algae, and a water level optimal for the ducks to thrive.

These methods and serious predator eradication programs are working. Speedy says 500 of New Zealand’s 3,000 blue ducks are in this watershed, four times more than in 2001.












Canoeing on the river




Canoeing on the river. Photograph: Jeremy Lugio/The Guardian


Yet the scheme’s viability depends on water. The power company takes only 7% of the entire Whanganui River, but it’s the clearest, cleanest, coldest water at the head. That water is pushed through tunnels, canals, lakes and power stations until it eventually flows into an entirely different river system. On average, only 20% of the Whanganui’s headwaters flow past the intake structure to the sea.

To the tribes that hold this river sacred, this causes environmental, cultural and spiritual damage. They categorically oppose the extraction of their river’s water, and though the new law gives the river newfound rights, it does not reverse pre-existing laws, including the consent granting Genesis the rights to divert water for hydroelectric power until 2039.

Speedy walks across a massive diversion culvert carrying water from the upper tributaries to the power station. He looks down at the narrow Whanganui River below.

“The energy in this river … can be used for electricity, but it also energises the cultural and spiritual values of this landscape, [which is] very important to Māori,” he says. “It energises biodiversity, in the form of animals and fish, like whio and eels, angling for trout fishermen, kayaking, rafting.”

But it is a delicate balance for the country of nearly 5 million people.

“There’s a whole lot of uses from this energy that’s flowing past us here,” Speedy says. “And it’s important to strike that balance between renewable energy to run our society and our economy, but not wreck the environments that we take the energy from.”

‘More dirt than there should be’












Murky water in the river




‘The turbidity in the river is really high,’ Adam Daniel says. ‘There’s more dirt than there should be.’ Photograph: Jeremy Lugio/The Guardian


Thirty kilometres downriver, Adam Daniel, who works for Fish & Game New Zealand, ploughs through a narrow tunnel of sopping wet ferns and gorse with his quad bike. He checks the GPS and navigates deeper into the steep undulating bush country of the 20,000-hectare Tongariro Forest Conservation Area.

Daniel is on a multi-day adventure collecting water samples on the Whanganui’s upper tributaries. He is using money raised from increased foreign angler licences and Genesis Energy funding intended to mitigate some of its environmental impacts to conduct a two-year water quality study on the upper river.

Previous studies alerted Daniel that the Whanganui River is far dirtier than its tributary the Whakapapa River, even though they both start in the national park. So every month – rain, shine or snow – he visits 16 backcountry study areas to gather water samples and log electro-conductivity and temperature readings.

“We’ve recognised the turbidity in the river is really high – there’s more dirt than there should be,” says Daniel, whose job is to protect river habitat. “So I am trying to identify the catchments [watersheds] here in the upper end of the Whanganui that have high loads of sediment.”

More than halfway through his study, Daniel became alarmed. He was in the back-country preparing to drift down the upper river in a wetsuit to count fish. He waded into the river and looked down.

The energy in this river … also energises the cultural and spiritual values of this landscape.


The Whanganui River had less than a metre visibility (the neighbouring Whakapapa River still had seven metres of visibility).

Daniel hiked every stream on the upper river – they were clear. However, when he checked the stream below the large discharge pipe from Lake Otamangakau, the picture became clearer.

Genesis Energy diverts 80% of Whanganui’s headwaters into the Lake Otamangaka. During low flows in summer, up to three cubic metres of cool water is discharged from the lake. Those flows are intended to help trout, whio and other species during stressful hot weather, but Daniel is concerned it may not be working as intended.

“They can take nearly the entire river of crystal-clear cold water and run it through their man-made lake to keep fish alive, then dump the mixed water with algae and sediment back in the river,” Daniel says.

This drastic change in visibility, coupled with higher water temperatures, has major impacts on the river’s downstream habitat and the non-native trout and other native fish that rely on cold, clean water to thrive in the critical hot and dry summer months.

“We are arguing that their consent condition does not exempt them from the temperature change and that the discharge is clearly having an impact on the river, so they should stop,” Daniel says.

Nigel Clarke, the executive general manager of wholesale operations at Genesis, says the company is compliant with the regulations. “Genesis is committed to the principle of kaitiakitanga; water is essential to our country, our business and to the communities we operate in.

“In complex locations like the Tongariro Power Scheme where there are multiple users of water, we work closely in partnership with local iwi and local communities to positively influence and improve the ecological health and mauri of our waterways.

“Genesis operates the Tongariro Power Scheme in line with resource consents and always welcomes the opportunity to better understand any potential effects of its operations.”

Speedymaintains the turbidity “is not massive … there is some discolouration. It’s not crystal clear but it’s not real dirty brown either.”

But he says Genesis is looking into the issue. “We are going to implement a regime this summer where we do more sampling, where we try and tease out the difference between the various components of the turbidity.”

‘The river is our playground, the river is our work’














A view of the river




The Whanganui has ‘always been a part of us’, Josephine Haworth says. ‘It always will be, until the day we die.’ Photograph: Jeremy Lugio/The Guardian


Some 145km downstream, Josephine Haworth and her husband operate Whanganui River Adventures. They live in Pipiriki, a small village 85km from the sea. The town is nestled in the lush green hills on a curved bend in the river at the southern edge of Whanganui National Park – home to the famous Whanganui Journey, a five-day, 145km canoe trip through the park. Haworth is from the Whanganui tribes and is the third generation of her family to operate a tour business on the river. Her husband grew up here and his family has been in the business since the 1970s.

“The river is nothing new,” Haworth says about the river that runs through her backyard. “It’s always been a part of us. It always will be, until the day we die.”

But the river here is often the colour of chocolate milk from the myriad tributaries that swell with rain and carry soil and sediment from the forest and farm country. The streams bring water, but they also bring sediment and E coli. That’s a concern for the about 18,000 people who canoe it each year. The Haworths lives are intertwined with the river, so it concerns her too.

It’s always been a big part of our lives growing up. The river has always been us.


When it comes to the river’s personhood, she says it’s hard to explain because the river has always been a big part of her family’s lives. “The river is our food source, the river is our playground, the river is our work. It’s always been a big part of our lives growing up. The river has always been us.”

A place to grow












A canoe on the river




A canoe on the river, areas of which are home to kayaking, rowing and clubs for waka ama, traditional outrigger canoes. Photograph: Jeremy Lugio/The Guardian


In the town of Whanganui near the river’s mouth, Howard Hyland hosed thick mud off the cement boat ramp connecting the Whanganui River Outrigger Canoe Club’s boathouse to the river. The 76-year-old New Zealander is a national coach and paddler for waka ama, traditional outrigger canoes.

Here, near the sea, the river is wide, slow and steady – home to kayaking, rowing and waka ama clubs. Hyland returned from Whakatane to his roots on the river to start a waka ama club for youth.

“I wanted to start a club that was for all peoples, not just for Māori, not just for pākehā, not just for islanders. I wanted it for all of Whanganui,” he says.

Hyland is connected to the river through his grandmother. When he was four years old, he learned to paddle the waka while she fished. Through her love of the river, he became involved in the river and the sport.

A paddler calls out “hup”, signalling the paddlers to switch sides in unison as the team paddle up the river past Hyland. Hyland sees the macro and micro problems the river faces. The biggest issue, he says, is the siphoning of the headwaters for power, but he also details the simple problem of polluting.

“You watch these kids, you see they bring back all the plastics that they see on the river,” Hyland says with a hint of pride. “It tells you they have learned something while they’ve been here. They understand we’ve got to stop polluting the river.”

For Hyland, the river is a vehicle to train good paddlers and good people who care for the river. The river provides his rowers with a place to succeed, a place to grow and a place to find solace at 5:30am as the sun casts first light across the river’s mist.

While the paddlers disappear up river, Howard shares the whakatauki, or philosophy, shared by those connected to the river.

If you give the river a voice, are you going to listen?















About 18,000 people canoe on the river each year.




About 18,000 people canoe on the river each year. Photograph: Jeremy Lugio/The Guardian


This river is now Te Awa Tupua. The new status offers New Zealand a framework to chart a new course to protect the Whanganui River and provide the world with a blueprint for caring for the earth’s arteries.

Barraclough says there are now guardians who can argue for the river in court, if its rights are infringed. The law doesn’t offer iron-clad protections, but “it does mean that it stands a better chance.”

O’Donnell agrees. “It definitely has power to drive long-term change. How it holds people to account, I think that is going to be the tricky part.”

Hosing off the last mud from the ramp, Hyland wonders what the future will bring for his beloved river. “If you give the river a voice, are you going to listen?”

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Comments






Mike:

 

Thanks for posting. It is a beautiful river. My wife is a New
Zealander  and we have seen it on previous visits. Never had time to canoe
it though.

Best regards,

 

Mike


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From: title=noreply@m.resiliencesystem.org>mdmcdonald

Sent: Monday, January 06, 2020 1:06 PM


Cc: Stuart Cowan ; title=mario@yanez.earth>Mario Yanez ; title=freya.yost@cloudburstfoundation.com>Freya Yost ; title=louispatrickhill@gmail.com>Nichie Louis Patrick Hill Kalinago ; title=cozier.frederick@icloud.com>Cozier Fredrick ; title=claudiussanford@hotmail.com>claudius sanford ; title=ia.plusLAB@gmail.com>Illya Azaroff ; title=jfullerton@capitalinstitute.org>John Fullerton

Subject: [content_management] (task) Saving the Whanganui: can
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NZ RS style="WHITE-SPACE: pre"> Aukland RN style="WHITE-SPACE: pre"> GRS
4 class=Apple-tab-span style="WHITE-SPACE: pre">cover

environment, indigenous rights,
personhood rights,. river, energy, ecosystem

 





href="https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/nov/30/saving-the-whanganui-can-personhood-rescue-a-river">https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/nov/30/saving-the-whanganui-can-personhood-rescue-a-river


style="FONT-SIZE: 1.2em; FONT-FAMILY: -apple-system-font; PADDING-BOTTOM: 0px; PADDING-TOP: 0px; PADDING-LEFT: 0px; MARGIN: 0px; LINE-HEIGHT: 1.5em; PADDING-RIGHT: 0px; text-rendering: optimizelegibility">


style="FONT-SIZE: 1.95em; MARGIN-BOTTOM: 0.5em; MAX-WIDTH: 100%; MARGIN-TOP: 0px; LINE-HEIGHT: 1.21em">Saving
the Whanganui: can personhood rescue a river?
style="MARGIN-BOTTOM: 1.45em; MAX-WIDTH: 100%; MARGIN-TOP: -0.75em"> class="content__dateline-wpd js-wpd content__dateline-wpd--modified date"
style="FONT-SIZE: 1em !important; MAX-WIDTH: 100%; MARGIN: 0px; DISPLAY: inline !important"
data-timestamp="1575054015000" datetime="2019-11-29T14:00:15-0500"
itemprop="datePublished">Fri 29 Nov 2019

Adam Daniel
wades waist deep through the glassy water. Pumice stones spiral in the shallow
eddy, while the shrill whistles of a male whio (blue duck) echo upstream
through the green canyon walls. The mountain stream’s deep current slows
around a lone tree standing on a small rocky island before rushing toward the
sea.


Like a doctor, Daniel spends the morning checking
the pulse of the river’s upper arteries, taking temperature readings and
drawing water samples to diagnose its vitality. Thirty kilometres to his
south-east, the Whanganui River’s pristine headwaters begin in the
internationally renowned Tongariro National Park, on the western flanks of
three cone volcanoes, Ruapehu, Tongariro and Ngauruhoe.


From there the river carves through two national
parks, a national forest, farmland, two large towns and many smaller
communities on its journey 260km to the south, where it empties into the
Tasman Sea.


But the body of water flowing past Daniel is more
than a geographical feature. Granted personhood in 2017 by an act of the style="MAX-WIDTH: 100%; COLOR: rgb(65,110,210)"
href="https://www.theguardian.com/world/newzealand"
data-component="auto-linked-tag" data-link-name="auto-linked-tag">New
Zealand parliament, the Whanganui is the first river in the world to be
recognised as an indivisible and living being.


The Māori tribes that live along the Whanganui have
always seen the river as sacred – its waters have nourished and blessed the
people throughout the 700 years they have lived beside it. The law set in
motion new intentions to uphold the mana (prestige) and mauri (life force) of
the river.

style="FONT-SIZE: 1.42em; MARGIN-BOTTOM: 1em; MARGIN-TOP: 1em; COLOR: ; FONT-STYLE: italic; LINE-HEIGHT: 1.38em; margin-inline-start: 1em"> style="MAX-WIDTH: 100%">
style="MAX-WIDTH: 100%; PADDING-LEFT: 16px; MARGIN-LEFT: 2px; BORDER-LEFT: 3px solid; MARGIN-RIGHT: 6px">

This river is our river. It is all of ours, and
how we look after it belongs to all of us.

style="MAX-WIDTH: 100%">Whanganui elder John
Maihi

Yet despite the river’s new legal status, it still
faces challenges from farming and forestry to dams and development. And Daniel
– a biologist charged with monitoring river habitat health – is troubled with
recent temperature and clarity readings.


The river is sick, and he needs to know where the
illness begins.



style="MAX-WIDTH: 100%">Defining the river’s rights

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sizes="465px" media="(min-width: 0px)"> style="MAX-WIDTH: 100%; HEIGHT: auto; MARGIN: 0.5em auto; DISPLAY: block"
alt="The Whanganui River as seen from above"
src="https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/ccb194058deeab8fc93cd1db30c3ffe7961dcfba/0_0_1920_1080/master/1920.jpg?width=300&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=dda75c3e274174de0355d7b525570170"
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style="MAX-WIDTH: 100%; WIDTH: 100%; MARGIN-TOP: 0.8em; COLOR: "
itemprop="description"> style="MARGIN-BOTTOM: 0.25em; MAX-WIDTH: 100%; MARGIN-TOP: 0.25em">The
Whanganui River as seen from a drone. The Māori tribes that live along the
waterway have always seen it as sacred. Photograph: Jeremy Lugio/The Guardian

Spring rain cascades down the Ngapuwaiwaha Marae’s
decorative roofline in Taumarunui, the first large town the Whanganui River
meets. Hundreds gather at 8am to celebrate the river, the new act and the
inauguration of the two people selected to speak on behalf of the river: Dame
Tariana Turia, an influential Māori political leader, and Turama Hawira, an
experienced Māori advisor and educator.


Visitors await the powhiri, a ritual welcoming
people to the marae, a fenced-in complex of carved buildings belonging to a
particular tribe.


As the rain subsides, Gerrard Albert steps up to
the microphone. He is one in a long line of leaders who have fought for
recognition of their deep relationship to the river since the 1840 signing of
the Treaty of Waitangi, New Zealand’s founding document. He address the crowd
in Māori and then in English.


“The settlement legislation recognises Te Awa Tupua
as this: a living and indivisible whole comprising the Whanganui River from
the mountains to the sea, incorporating its tributaries and all its physical
and metaphysical elements,” Albert says. “For the first time, a framework
stems from the intrinsic spiritual values of an indigenous belief system.”


When the New Zealand parliament passed the Te Awa
Tupua Act granting the Whanganui River system legal personhood, the decision
sent waves across the globe, settling the longest water dispute in the
nation’s history and establishing a unique legal framework rooted in the Māori
worldview of the Whanganui tribes, who revere the river as a tupuna, or
ancestor.


The law begins by recognising the river as an
indivisible and living being called Te Awa Tupua and outlines four core
principles from the tribes’ perspective, including their inalienable
connection to the river. Then, it states this being “has all the rights,
powers, duties and liabilities of a legal person”.


Tom Barraclough, a legal researcher and expert on
the Te Awa Tupua law, says the legislation will give tribes “significant
influence” over the future of the river. “As a consequence of giving iwi
greater rights, there may be greater protection for nature.”


Dr Erin O’Donnell, a senior fellow at the
University of Melbourne law school and author of a book on river rights,
agrees. “The act shifts us away from this resource construction where we ask,
‘what do we want from the river?’ and into a space where we can say, ‘what do
we want for the river and how do we get there with the river?’”


Over the course of six months, the Guardian
travelled the Whanganui to investigate the impact of the new protections – and
good intentions.

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sizes="445px" media="(min-width: 0px)"> style="MAX-WIDTH: 100%; HEIGHT: auto; MARGIN: 0.5em auto; DISPLAY: block"
alt="Moss on a rock along the Whanganui"
src="https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/3b96637103d65d22aa11225be44d55dc7e909a21/0_0_1920_1080/master/1920.jpg?width=300&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=495c341bd63ba2617120da56f487fbe9"
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style="MAX-WIDTH: 100%; WIDTH: 100%; MARGIN-TOP: 0.8em; COLOR: "
itemprop="description"> style="MARGIN-BOTTOM: 0.25em; MAX-WIDTH: 100%; MARGIN-TOP: 0.25em">Moss
on a rock along the Whanganui. Photograph: Jeremy Lugio/The Guardian

“You are defining, essentially, the river’s
rights,” Albert says.“It puts the river at the centre of the picture and asks
us to organise around it.”


This view isn’t unique in the larger legal
framework of New Zealand. In 2014, New Zealand gave the same rights to a
former national park, Te Urewera, and soon after Mount Taranaki as well.


The trend has also taken hold outside the country.
In February 2019, citizens of Toledo, Ohio, granted legal rights to Lake Erie
– a fight that began after a 2014 toxic algae bloom shut down city water for
three days. India recognised the Ganges and Yamuna rivers as legal entities in
2017, but those rights were overturned. In July 2019, Bangladesh joined suit
and granted all of its rivers this same status. And in September the Yurok
Tribe in California granted personhood to the Klamath River.


But it’s unclear whether it will work. In the case
of Te Awa Tupua, the hard work lies downstream, where the river and its
branches encounter development, farming, forestry and run-off which challenge
its health and ecology.


Water woes are not unique to the Whanganui River -
similar concerns exist across the country. A 600-page Waitangi Tribunal report
released last August criticised the government’s Resource Management Act for
allowing “a serious degradation of water to occur in many ancestral water
bodies”. It highlighted the government’s failure to recognise Māori rights and
interests in water. It recommends sweeping changes for both.

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Today, those gathered in style="MAX-WIDTH: 100%"> Taumarunui are celebrating the first step,
as the two voices of the river begin meeting with the communities along it to
build a strategy that addresses the body of water as an indivisible whole.
However, Albert says the law will take years to have an impact.


style="MAX-WIDTH: 100%">A fine balance

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alt="Shallows along the Whanganui"
src="https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/58e77082a0c3882ee141fee7b8262aabddbbdd76/0_0_1920_1080/master/1920.jpg?width=300&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=f9a290f9e0eed8e7cd1fcf3ab618a213"
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itemprop="description"> style="MARGIN-BOTTOM: 0.25em; MAX-WIDTH: 100%; MARGIN-TOP: 0.25em">Despite
the Whanganui’s new legal status, it still faces challenges from farming and
forestry to dams and development. Photograph: Jeremy Lugio/The Guardian

Near the
river’s source at Tongariro National Park, Dave Pickett looks below the
surface of the Mangatepopo Stream with a bathyscope. Knee deep in the swift
current of this Whanganui tributary, he measures small bugs and algae life
clinging to the river bottom, one gauge of a river’s health. He shouts numbers
to his colleague.


The men are conducting ecology assessments for
Genesis Energy, the company that operates the Tongariro Power Scheme that
provides 4% of New Zealand’s energy. The hydropower system diverts the water
of the Whanganui River and five of its upper tributaries, including the
Mangatepopo. Pickett surveys the stream’s health above and below an intake
structure which draws 75% of the water, leaving 25% to flow back into the
river. The intake is just outside the park, 15km from the stream’s source and
15km from its confluence with the Whanganui.


The contractors join Campbell Speedy, the
environmental coordinator and ecologist working for Genesis. He knows bugs,
fish, ecology and the watershed. And he understands the environmental impacts
of energy development and the complex cultural landscape of the river.


“This landscape behind us here is Tongariro
National Park,” Speedy says. “It’s got dual world heritage status, not only
for its volcanic landscape but for its cultural landscape. The water’s coming
off a pristine environment. It doesn’t get much better than what we’re seeing
right here.”


But like Daniel, Speedy knows the river faces
complex issues downstream.


New Zealand’s clean, green image has been mired
with reports signalling major water quality issues in many of its rivers. In
particular, water quality data from the National Institute of Water and
Atmospheric Research shows the lower Whanganui River is often badly
contaminated with fecal bacteria and fine sediment from extensive farming on
its steep slopes and on the slopes of many of its tributaries.


In addition to these threats, many point the finger
at hydropower.


Since the 1970s the power scheme has harnessed
energy from these rivers, often leaving the river beds dry below the intakes.
In 2004, when Genesis was granted rights to use this water for 35 more years,
it came with stipulations requiring the company to keep a certain amount of
water in the Whanganui and Mangatepopo. The minimum flows were set to a level
to maximise whio food production and food access. Speedy says this aimed to
improve the ecology of the Mangatepopo stream and the Whanganui River –
leading to healthy levels of bugs and algae, and a water level optimal for the
ducks to thrive.


These methods and serious predator eradication
programs are working. Speedy says 500 of New Zealand’s 3,000 blue ducks are in
this watershed, four times more than in 2001.

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srcset="https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/619da26fc87a922e5d8e80214f4ba2a3eee4cf80/0_0_1920_1080/master/1920.jpg?width=445&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=f7d39832de8f8e7f3443fe67799aa651 445w"
sizes="445px" media="(min-width: 0px)"> style="MAX-WIDTH: 100%; HEIGHT: auto; MARGIN: 0.5em auto; DISPLAY: block"
alt="Canoeing on the river"
src="https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/619da26fc87a922e5d8e80214f4ba2a3eee4cf80/0_0_1920_1080/master/1920.jpg?width=300&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=729c24d7cdf8980bb632036d70b9f324"
itemprop="contentUrl">
style="MAX-WIDTH: 100%">
style="MAX-WIDTH: 100%; WIDTH: 100%; MARGIN-TOP: 0.8em; COLOR: "
itemprop="description"> style="MARGIN-BOTTOM: 0.25em; MAX-WIDTH: 100%; MARGIN-TOP: 0.25em">Canoeing
on the river. Photograph: Jeremy Lugio/The Guardian

Yet the scheme’s viability depends on water. The
power company takes only 7% of the entire Whanganui River, but it’s the
clearest, cleanest, coldest water at the head. That water is pushed through
tunnels, canals, lakes and power stations until it eventually flows into an
entirely different river system. On average, only 20% of the Whanganui’s
headwaters flow past the intake structure to the sea.


To the tribes that hold this river sacred, this
causes environmental, cultural and spiritual damage. They categorically oppose
the extraction of their river’s water, and though the new law gives the river
newfound rights, it does not reverse pre-existing laws, including the consent
granting Genesis the rights to divert water for hydroelectric power until
2039.


Speedy walks across a massive diversion culvert
carrying water from the upper tributaries to the power station. He looks down
at the narrow Whanganui River below.


“The energy in this river … can be used for
electricity, but it also energises the cultural and spiritual values of this
landscape, [which is] very important to Māori,” he says. “It energises
biodiversity, in the form of animals and fish, like whio and eels, angling for
trout fishermen, kayaking, rafting.”


But it is a delicate balance for the country of
nearly 5 million people.


“There’s a whole lot of uses from this energy
that’s flowing past us here,” Speedy says. “And it’s important to strike that
balance between renewable energy to run our society and our economy, but not
wreck the environments that we take the energy from.”


style="MAX-WIDTH: 100%">‘More dirt than there should be’

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srcset="https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/148b6aa5ace5a482210189088ae1e44ee6ef1d4c/0_0_1920_1080/master/1920.jpg?width=605&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=e58be08d3eeddf71f33d7fda7a557d61 605w"
sizes="605px" media="(min-width: 480px)"> srcset="https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/148b6aa5ace5a482210189088ae1e44ee6ef1d4c/0_0_1920_1080/master/1920.jpg?width=445&quality=45&auto=format&fit=max&dpr=2&s=656fcb6e4dbc90b747ab12a20db4e0be 890w"
sizes="445px"
media="(min-width: 0px) and (-webkit-min-device-pixel-ratio: 1.25), (min-width: 0px) and (min-resolution: 120dpi)"> style="MAX-WIDTH: 100%"
srcset="https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/148b6aa5ace5a482210189088ae1e44ee6ef1d4c/0_0_1920_1080/master/1920.jpg?width=445&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=0864c733e99820dc542d2ba5a95c9662 445w"
sizes="445px" media="(min-width: 0px)"> style="MAX-WIDTH: 100%; HEIGHT: auto; MARGIN: 0.5em auto; DISPLAY: block"
alt="Murky water in the river"
src="https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/148b6aa5ace5a482210189088ae1e44ee6ef1d4c/0_0_1920_1080/master/1920.jpg?width=300&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=61cd8b7dc7fd589b2cd9cfb05b05c42f"
itemprop="contentUrl">
style="MAX-WIDTH: 100%">
style="MAX-WIDTH: 100%; WIDTH: 100%; MARGIN-TOP: 0.8em; COLOR: "
itemprop="description"> style="MARGIN-BOTTOM: 0.25em; MAX-WIDTH: 100%; MARGIN-TOP: 0.25em">‘The
turbidity in the river is really high,’ Adam Daniel says. ‘There’s more dirt
than there should be.’ Photograph: Jeremy Lugio/The Guardian

Thirty kilometres downriver, Adam Daniel, who works
for Fish & Game New Zealand, ploughs through a narrow tunnel of sopping
wet ferns and gorse with his quad bike. He checks the GPS and navigates deeper
into the steep undulating bush country of the 20,000-hectare Tongariro Forest
href="https://www.theguardian.com/environment/conservation"
data-component="auto-linked-tag"
data-link-name="auto-linked-tag">Conservation Area.


Daniel is on a multi-day adventure collecting water
samples on the Whanganui’s upper tributaries. He is using money raised from
increased foreign angler licences and Genesis Energy funding intended to
mitigate some of its environmental impacts to conduct a two-year water quality
study on the upper river.


Previous studies alerted Daniel that the Whanganui
River is far dirtier than its tributary the Whakapapa River, even though they
both start in the national park. So every month – rain, shine or snow – he
visits 16 backcountry study areas to gather water samples and log
electro-conductivity and temperature readings.


“We’ve recognised the turbidity in the river is
really high – there’s more dirt than there should be,” says Daniel, whose job
is to protect river habitat. “So I am trying to identify the catchments
[watersheds] here in the upper end of the Whanganui that have high loads of
sediment.”


More than halfway through his study, Daniel became
alarmed. He was in the back-country preparing to drift down the upper river in
a wetsuit to count fish. He waded into the river and looked down.

class=pullquote
style="FONT-SIZE: 1.42em; MARGIN-BOTTOM: 1em; MARGIN-TOP: 1em; COLOR: ; FONT-STYLE: italic; LINE-HEIGHT: 1.38em; margin-inline-start: 1em"> style="MAX-WIDTH: 100%">
style="MAX-WIDTH: 100%; PADDING-LEFT: 16px; MARGIN-LEFT: 2px; BORDER-LEFT: 3px solid; MARGIN-RIGHT: 6px">

The energy in this river … also energises the
cultural and spiritual values of this landscape.


The Whanganui River had less than a metre
visibility (the neighbouring Whakapapa River still had seven metres of
visibility).


Daniel hiked every stream on the upper river – they
were clear. However, when he checked the stream below the large discharge pipe
from Lake Otamangakau, the picture became clearer.


Genesis Energy diverts 80% of Whanganui’s
headwaters into the Lake Otamangaka. During low flows in summer, up to three
cubic metres of cool water is discharged from the lake. Those flows are
intended to help trout, whio and other species during stressful hot weather,
but Daniel is concerned it may not be working as intended.


“They can take nearly the entire river of
crystal-clear cold water and run it through their man-made lake to keep fish
alive, then dump the mixed water with algae and sediment back in the river,”
Daniel says.


This drastic change in visibility, coupled with
higher water temperatures, has major impacts on the river’s downstream habitat
and the non-native trout and other native fish that rely on cold, clean water
to thrive in the critical hot and dry summer months.


“We are arguing that their consent condition does
not exempt them from the temperature change and that the discharge is clearly
having an impact on the river, so they should stop,” Daniel says.


Nigel Clarke, the executive general manager of
wholesale operations at Genesis, says the company is compliant with the
regulations. “Genesis is committed to the principle of kaitiakitanga; water is
essential to our country, our business and to the communities we operate
in.


“In complex locations like the Tongariro Power
Scheme where there are multiple users of water, we work closely in partnership
with local iwi and local communities to positively influence and improve the
ecological health and mauri of our waterways.


“Genesis operates the Tongariro Power Scheme in
line with resource consents and always welcomes the opportunity to better
understand any potential effects of its operations.”


Speedymaintains the turbidity “is not massive …
there is some discolouration. It’s not crystal clear but it’s not real dirty
brown either.”


But he says Genesis is looking into the issue. “We
are going to implement a regime this summer where we do more sampling, where
we try and tease out the difference between the various components of the
turbidity.”


style="MAX-WIDTH: 100%">‘The river is our playground, the river is our
work’

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sizes="465px"
media="(min-width: 0px) and (-webkit-min-device-pixel-ratio: 1.25), (min-width: 0px) and (min-resolution: 120dpi)"> style="MAX-WIDTH: 100%"
srcset="https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/a8c2a9a56c5903b3ec3c1187c198550990c8ef9a/0_0_1920_1080/master/1920.jpg?width=465&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=545973e6c8068e4fae76b4e9fd6d84e8 465w"
sizes="465px" media="(min-width: 0px)"> style="MAX-WIDTH: 100%; HEIGHT: auto; MARGIN: 0.5em auto; DISPLAY: block"
alt="A view of the river"
src="https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/a8c2a9a56c5903b3ec3c1187c198550990c8ef9a/0_0_1920_1080/master/1920.jpg?width=300&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=e020d9469d4df9099cc2b75de30f6f1c"
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style="MAX-WIDTH: 100%; WIDTH: 100%; MARGIN-TOP: 0.8em; COLOR: "
itemprop="description"> style="MARGIN-BOTTOM: 0.25em; MAX-WIDTH: 100%; MARGIN-TOP: 0.25em">The
Whanganui has ‘always been a part of us’, Josephine Haworth says. ‘It always
will be, until the day we die.’ Photograph: Jeremy Lugio/The Guardian

Some 145km downstream, Josephine Haworth and her
husband operate Whanganui River Adventures. They live in Pipiriki, a small
village 85km from the sea. The town is nestled in the lush green hills on a
curved bend in the river at the southern edge of Whanganui National Park –
home to the famous Whanganui Journey, a five-day, 145km canoe trip through the
park. Haworth is from the Whanganui tribes and is the third generation of her
family to operate a tour business on the river. Her husband grew up here and
his family has been in the business since the 1970s.


“The river is nothing new,” Haworth says about the
river that runs through her backyard. “It’s always been a part of us. It
always will be, until the day we die.”


But the river here is often the colour of chocolate
milk from the myriad tributaries that swell with rain and carry soil and
sediment from the forest and farm country. The streams bring water, but they
also bring sediment and E coli. That’s a concern for the about 18,000 people
who canoe it each year. The Haworths lives are intertwined with the river, so
it concerns her too.

style="FONT-SIZE: 1.42em; MARGIN-BOTTOM: 1em; MARGIN-TOP: 1em; COLOR: ; FONT-STYLE: italic; LINE-HEIGHT: 1.38em; margin-inline-start: 1em"> style="MAX-WIDTH: 100%">
style="MAX-WIDTH: 100%; PADDING-LEFT: 16px; MARGIN-LEFT: 2px; BORDER-LEFT: 3px solid; MARGIN-RIGHT: 6px">

It’s always been a big part of our lives growing
up. The river has always been us.


When it comes to the river’s personhood, she says
it’s hard to explain because the river has always been a big part of her
family’s lives. “The river is our food source, the river is our playground,
the river is our work. It’s always been a big part of our lives growing up.
The river has always been us.”


style="MAX-WIDTH: 100%">A place to grow

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sizes="445px"
media="(min-width: 0px) and (-webkit-min-device-pixel-ratio: 1.25), (min-width: 0px) and (min-resolution: 120dpi)"> style="MAX-WIDTH: 100%"
srcset="https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/747a176ec1c122ad1d7935890640539e33538d86/0_0_1920_1080/master/1920.jpg?width=445&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=04a446ca8e7312d119207b43f3c60cb1 445w"
sizes="445px" media="(min-width: 0px)"> style="MAX-WIDTH: 100%; HEIGHT: auto; MARGIN: 0.5em auto; DISPLAY: block"
alt="A canoe on the river"
src="https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/747a176ec1c122ad1d7935890640539e33538d86/0_0_1920_1080/master/1920.jpg?width=300&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=3909c200f251dcccad96bc595c0fccf6"
itemprop="contentUrl">
style="MAX-WIDTH: 100%">
style="MAX-WIDTH: 100%; WIDTH: 100%; MARGIN-TOP: 0.8em; COLOR: "
itemprop="description"> style="MARGIN-BOTTOM: 0.25em; MAX-WIDTH: 100%; MARGIN-TOP: 0.25em">A
canoe on the river, areas of which are home to kayaking, rowing and clubs for
waka ama, traditional outrigger canoes. Photograph: Jeremy Lugio/The Guardian

In the town of Whanganui near the river’s mouth,
Howard Hyland hosed thick mud off the cement boat ramp connecting the
Whanganui River Outrigger Canoe Club’s boathouse to the river. The 76-year-old
New Zealander is a national coach and paddler for waka ama, traditional
outrigger canoes.


Here, near the sea, the river is wide, slow and
steady – home to kayaking, rowing and waka ama clubs. Hyland returned from
Whakatane to his roots on the river to start a waka ama club for youth.


“I wanted to start a club that was for all peoples,
not just for Māori, not just for pākehā, not just for islanders. I wanted it
for all of Whanganui,” he says.


Hyland is connected to the river through his
grandmother. When he was four years old, he learned to paddle the waka while
she fished. Through her love of the river, he became involved in the river and
the sport.


A paddler calls out “hup”, signalling the paddlers
to switch sides in unison as the team paddle up the river past Hyland. Hyland
sees the macro and micro problems the river faces. The biggest issue, he says,
is the siphoning of the headwaters for power, but he also details the simple
problem of polluting.


“You watch these kids, you see they bring back all
the plastics that they see on the river,” Hyland says with a hint of pride.
“It tells you they have learned something while they’ve been here. They
understand we’ve got to stop polluting the river.”


For Hyland, the river is a vehicle to train good
paddlers and good people who care for the river. The river provides his rowers
with a place to succeed, a place to grow and a place to find solace at 5:30am
as the sun casts first light across the river’s mist.


While the paddlers disappear up river, Howard
shares the whakatauki, or philosophy, shared by those connected to the
river.

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If you give the river a voice, are you going to
listen?

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sizes="645px"
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srcset="https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/1004e4fe2572fbbdfb8b0ec855958d505c3f8717/0_0_1920_1080/master/1920.jpg?width=645&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=d6f3790a77dc89d34dd8e72b0372d5ec 645w"
sizes="645px" media="(min-width: 480px)"> srcset="https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/1004e4fe2572fbbdfb8b0ec855958d505c3f8717/0_0_1920_1080/master/1920.jpg?width=465&quality=45&auto=format&fit=max&dpr=2&s=649faff03ceb680d289b53984be328c9 930w"
sizes="465px"
media="(min-width: 0px) and (-webkit-min-device-pixel-ratio: 1.25), (min-width: 0px) and (min-resolution: 120dpi)"> style="MAX-WIDTH: 100%"
srcset="https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/1004e4fe2572fbbdfb8b0ec855958d505c3f8717/0_0_1920_1080/master/1920.jpg?width=465&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=ca93a6a9ef6957d1556722fc5b12018d 465w"
sizes="465px" media="(min-width: 0px)"> style="MAX-WIDTH: 100%; HEIGHT: auto; MARGIN: 0.5em auto; DISPLAY: block"
alt="About 18,000 people canoe on the river each year."
src="https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/1004e4fe2572fbbdfb8b0ec855958d505c3f8717/0_0_1920_1080/master/1920.jpg?width=300&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=d1d35cdb68bfec1e482a7ee3158435fc"
itemprop="contentUrl">
style="MAX-WIDTH: 100%">
style="MAX-WIDTH: 100%; WIDTH: 100%; MARGIN-TOP: 0.8em; COLOR: "
itemprop="description"> style="MARGIN-BOTTOM: 0.25em; MAX-WIDTH: 100%; MARGIN-TOP: 0.25em">About
18,000 people canoe on the river each year. Photograph: Jeremy Lugio/The
Guardian

This river is now Te Awa Tupua. The new status
offers New Zealand a framework to chart a new course to protect the Whanganui
River and provide the world with a blueprint for caring for the earth’s
arteries.


Barraclough says there are now guardians who can
argue for the river in court, if its rights are infringed. The law doesn’t
offer iron-clad protections, but “it does mean that it stands a better
chance.”


O’Donnell agrees. “It definitely has power to drive
long-term change. How it holds people to account, I think that is going to be
the tricky part.”


Hosing off the last mud from the ramp, Hyland
wonders what the future will bring for his beloved river. “If you give the
river a voice, are you going to listen?”

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data-alt="test">


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