The five-year Piako River Green Corridor project, led by Waikato Regional Council, received $2.8 million through Ministry for the Environment’s Jobs for Nature funding last year.
The project also includes planting out drainage systems between the lower Piako and Waihou rivers to provide shade for native fish and bird species during the dry summers. In total, a quarter of a million plants will go in the ground and 35 hectares of land will be retired along 36 kilometres of riparian margins.
Ministry for the Environment’s Secretary for the Environment, Vicky Robertson, said “central to the new essential freshwater package is the principle of Te Mana o Te Wai, protecting the life supporting capacity of fresh water. These plants will reduce sediment by stabilising the banks and create a healthier environment for the life this awa supports”.
Planting started in June following a site blessing led by Ngāti Hako.
Waikato Regional Council Hauraki Coromandel Restoration Lead Emily O’Donnell said the project brought to life a long-held dream of iwi to reconnect the Kopuatai Wetland to Tikapa Moana (Firth of Thames).
“Most of the land is council flood scheme land, and this is an opportunity for us to meet the aspirations of iwi and showcase how planting can become part of a flood scheme without compromising capacity and integrity,” Emily said.
“We had talked about doing a project like this but under the council’s current funding it would take us probably 50-60 years to deliver. The Jobs for Nature funding allows us to deliver it in five years.”
Waikato Regional Council established a working group for the project, consisting of representatives from iwi, the Department of Conservation, Hauraki District Council, Fish & Game, the Thames Valley Land Drainage Advisory Subcommittee and the Waihou-Piako Flood Protection Advisory Subcommittee.