Boating New Zealand Boat Reviews
Reviews
Boating New Zealand News
News
Boating New Zealand Sports
Sport
Boating New Zealand Lifestyle
Lifestyle
advertise
Boating New Zealand Boat Reviews
Reviews
Boating New Zealand News
News
Boating New Zealand Sports
Sport
Boating New Zealand Lifestyle
Lifestyle
BOAT-REVIEWS-MOBILE
Boat Reviews
BOAT-NEWS-MOBILE
News
BOAT-SPORTS-MOBILE
Sports
BOAT-LIFESTYLE-MOBILE
Lifestyle
HomeEnvironmental News (Sustainability in Boating)Environmental Awareness CampaignsAnother Mahurangi spill raises serious questions for Watercare

Another Mahurangi spill raises serious questions for Watercare

Second overflow in just over a month leaves harbour users frustrated and oyster farmers angry and financially exposed.

Mahurangi oyster farmers are facing yet another blow after a fresh wastewater overflow hit the river last week. It comes just three weeks after the major 1,200-cubic-metre spill that shut down harvesting, triggered a million-dollar relief package, and damaged confidence in the region’s aquaculture systems.

Watercare confirmed an engineered overflow at Elizabeth Street on the evening of 18 November, triggered by 53mm of overnight rain. For locals, that number is galling.

“Fifty-three millimetres is not an extreme event. The network should cope with that,” says Mahurangi Oyster Farmers Association president Lynette Dunn. “When sensors fail and basic information goes missing, farmers lose confidence in the process.”

- Advertisement, article continues below -
Sports Marine Logo
Princess X80 - Boat Share
Princess X80 - Boat Share
NZD $1,696,000
2025 1/8 share

The overflow began at 6.05pm, but exactly how long it continued is unclear. A key monitoring sensor failed at 1am, leaving Watercare unable to confirm the full duration. Their current estimate sits at about 86 cubic metres of discharge.

Boats of every sort turned up for last November’s Lagoon Bay Raid inside Mahurangi Harbour.

Compounding the issue, an alarm sounded at the Palmer Street pump station for more than an hour. Watercare has not yet confirmed whether that site also overflowed.

Earlier this month, Aquaculture New Zealand and the New Zealand Oyster Industry Association secured an urgent $1 million relief agreement with Watercare for losses linked to the October spill. An independent assessor is now reviewing the full financial impact on farmers, including longer-term damage to market confidence.

“These events don’t just affect harvests—they undermine trust in the entire industry,” says AQNZ chief executive Teena Hale Pennington.

For growers, the repeated failures are hitting hard: harvest delays, environmental harm, slipping customer confidence, and the emotional toll of yet another uncertainty-filled season.

- Advertisement, article continues below -

Industry groups say they will continue pushing for full compensation by the end of the year. Meanwhile, farmers wait — again — for clean water readings, clear answers, and a reliable fix to a system that has now failed twice in less than a month.

Mahurangi oyster farmers despair at Watercare’s biggest sewage spill yet

Share this
Article
Article

Green invasion: Northland’s fight back against exotic caulerpa

Conservation Projects
When Cyclone Tam swept across Northland earlier this year, it left behind the usual trail of wind-da...
Article
Article

Webinar: Protecting New Zealand’s marine environment from invasive pests

Environmental Awareness Campaigns
Clean Below? Good to Go. is once again bringing New Zealand’s boating community a vital seminar on m...
A map showing the areas of newly-discovered exotic Caulerpa off Urupukapuka, Motukiekie and Moturua Islands. They are indicated with the small orange lines. An existing Biosecurity New Zealand ‘Controlled Area Notice’ is the larger shaded yellow area. Photo credit: Northland Regional Council

$6.2M Northland exotic Caulerpa funding welcomed but we all need to do more to safeguard NZ waters

Boater Involvement in Conservation
New Zealand’s coastal waters face an escalating threat from exotic caulerpa, an invasive seaweed now...

Comments

This conversation is moderated by Boating New Zealand. Subscribe to view comments and join the conversation. Choose your plan →

This conversation is moderated by Boating New Zealand.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Chris Woodhams
Chris Woodhams
Adventurer. Explorer. Sailor. Web Editors of Boating NZ

LATEST NEWS