Title: RMLA NATIONAL ROADSHOW Defining the environment
1RMLA NATIONAL ROADSHOWDefining the
environment
- Chris Fowler
- November 2007
2Outline of presentation
- Defining the environment to include future
activities - Preliminary matters
- Legal context
- RMA definition of environment
- Permitted baseline concept
- Receiving environment case law
- Comparison with permitted baseline
- Practical application of Hawthorn approach
3Preliminary matters
- Why is the topic important?
- Relevant to consent application process
- Informs preparation of accurate and robust AEE
4Preliminary matters
- Key terms
- proposed activity or proposal
- application site
- receiving environment
- permitted baseline concept
- receiving environment case law
5Preliminary matters
- Key terms
- Hawthorn Estates case
- proposed activity 32 lot residential
subdivision - application site 33.9 ha fronting Lower
Shotover and Domain Roads - receiving environment The Triangle and wider
Wakatipu Basin
6Preliminary matters
Hawthorn Estate
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
KEY proposed dwellings x existing
dwellings application site receiving
environment (present)
7Preliminary matters
Hawthorn Estate
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
KEY proposed dwellings x existing
dwellings x consented dwellings
application site
receiving environment
(present and future)
8Preliminary matters
- What has changed?
- Historically the environment assessed as it
exists - This approach easy, straight forward and obvious
- Evolution of permitted baseline concept
- Recent case law regarding the receiving
environment
9Preliminary matters
Permitted Baseline case law
Permitted Baseline case law
Receiving Environmental case law
Receiving Environment case law
10RMA definition of environment
- Section 2 RMA
- Environment includes
- Ecosystems and their constituent parts, including
people and communities and - All natural and physical resources and
- Amenity values and
- The social, economic, aesthetic, and cultural
conditions which affect the matters stated in
paragraphs (a) to (c) of this definition or which
are affected by those matters.
11RMA definition of environment
- Describes realm of application of RMA
- Very broad and all encompassing
- Unaltered for 16 years
12Permitted baseline concept
- Initially a common law creation
- Assessment of the environment as it exists
- Aley v North Shore City Council 1998 NZRMA 361
- Next four years fresh approach to assessment of
effects - Bayley v Manukau City Council 1999 1 NZLR 568
- Smith Chilcott v Auckland City Council 2001 3
NZLR 473 - Arrigato Investments Ltd v Auckland Regional
Council 2002 1 NZLR 323
13Permitted baseline concept
- Method of eliminating effects of permitted
activities - Identify permitted baseline
- Lawful activities occurring on site
- Permitted hypothetical activities (not being
fanciful) - Activities authorised by unimplemented resource
consents - Compare and eliminate permitted effects
- Only remaining effects are assessed against the
receiving environment
14Permitted baseline concept
- Rationale behind this approach
- Planning instrument is product of community
consultation - Permitted activities unregulated because effects
no more than minor - Legitimate to compare the effects of proposed
activity with those permitted on the application
site
15Permitted baseline concept
- Broad Summary
- Reasonable to identify activities permitted on
site - Even though such activities do not currently
exist - Provided not too speculative or fanciful
16Section 104(2) RMA
- RMA Amendment Act 2003 inserted s104(2)
- When forming an opinion for the purposes of
subsection (1)(a), a consent authority may
disregard an adverse effect of the activity on
the environment if the plan permits an activity
with that effect
17Section 104(2) RMA
- Section 104(2) modifies the permitted baseline
- Discretionary rather than mandatory
- Applies only to permitted activities
- Applies only to operative plans
- s104(2) does not effect a total substitution of
baseline principal - Rodney District Council v Eyres Eco-Park Ltd
(High Court 13 March 2006) - Tairua Marine Ltd v Waikato Regional Council
(High Court 29 June 2006)
18Receiving environment case law
- Stalker v Queenstown Lakes District Council
C40/2004 - A dog kennel and cattery on subject site
- Deer farming permitted on adjacent land
- Legitimate to take into account -
- the reasonably foreseeable environment on
which the effects of the proposal will impact
19Receiving environment case law
- Cashmere Trust v Canterbury Regional Council
C48/2004 - Court concerned about potentially significant
cumulative stormwater effects - Necessary to examine potential future effects
- If there is relevant evidence of realistic, not
fanciful, permitted activities of a sufficiently
direct connection with the effects to be
generated by the activity for which resource
consent is sought, then we consider the
obligation on the consent authority to have
regard to the total effect on a submitters
natural and physical resources becomes quite
powerful.
20Receiving environment case law
- Wilson Rickerby High Court decision (24
August 2004) - Pragmatic v liberal arguments
- Court dismisses practical impediments
- RMA requires a forward looking perspective
- Court concluded that
- The Environment Court took an unduly simplified
approach to the impact of adverse odour, and
perhaps noise, on the Wilson land. It looked
only at the current state of the Wilson land, and
ignored the effects of the proposed expansion on
the potential for development of that land.
21Receiving environment case law
- A number of unanswered questions arising from
Wilson Rickerby - Approach adopted appeared to
- Encompass both permitted and controlled (and
possibly discretionary activities) - Include activities provided for in proposed plan
- Broader and more liberal than permitted baseline
concept and s104(2) RMA
22Receiving environment case law
- Hawthorn Estates Ltd
- Wakatipu Basin application for subdivision and
land use consents - 32 lot subdivision with nominated building
platforms - Unimplemented consents to erect 63 dwellings in
vicinity - Relevant assessment criteria for subdivision
- Sympathetic to character of visual amenity
landscape? - Adverse effects on naturalness and rural quality
of the landscape?
23Receiving environment case law
- Environment Court conclusion (ENVC 83/04)
- Effects of proposal on retention of rural
qualities of landscape on the cusp, but - In the context of consented development on
this and other sites in the vicinity the proposal
is just compatible with the level of rural
development likely to arise in the area. (Para
82)
24Receiving environment case law
- Court of Appeal decision 2006 NZRMA 424
- Detailed analysis of pragmatic v liberal
arguments - Justice Cooper - necessary to have regard to the
future environment - In summary, all the provisions of the Act to
which we have referred lead to the conclusion
that when considering the actual and potential
effects on the environment of allowing an
activity, it is permissible, and will often be
desirable or even necessary, for the consent
authority to consider the future state of the
environment, on which such effects will occur.
(Para 57)
25Receiving environment case law
- Justice Coopers broad conclusion
- In our view the word environment embraces the
future state of the environment as it might be
modified by the utilisation of rights to carry
out permitted activity under a district plan. It
also includes the environment as it might be
modified by the implementation of resource
consents which have been granted at the time the
particular application is considered, where it
appears likely that those resource consents will
be implemented. (Para 84)
26Receiving environment case law
- A workable marriage of pragmatic and liberal
arguments - Logical extension of case law
- Dramatic reduction in scope and extent of
required assessment - We think Fogarty J erred when he suggested that
the effects of resource consents that might in
the future be made should be brought to account
in considering the likely future state of the
environment. (Para 84)
27Comparison with the permitted baseline
28Comparison with the permitted baseline
29Comparison with the permitted baseline
- Other points of difference
- Permitted baseline is always a discounting
exercise - Defining the receiving environment may
- Reduce effects (Hawthorn decision), or
- Increase effects (Wilson Rickerby and Stalker
decisions)
30Practical application
- Future environment should not be ignored
- Not relevant in every case
- Consent authority has discretion
- Exercise of discretionary power
- decision has to be made deliberately and in a
reasoned way for the purpose for which the power
is conferred (Refer Living Earth Limited v
Auckland RC A126/06)
31Practical application
- Factors informing the discretion
- Likelihood of future activity occurring
- Permitted activities - not unduly speculative
- Unimplemented consents - practically certain
- Sufficient evidential basis to enable adequate
effects assessment - Part 2 considerations
32Conclusion
- Key outcomes
- Future focus of RMA recognised
- Parameters consistent with community expectations
- Logical and reasonably straightforward to apply
- Parity between application site and receiving
environment