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The doors to our Whitianga and Paeroa offices will be closed for the summer break from 4pm on Friday, 20 December, while our Taupō and Hamilton offices will close for the summer break at 1pm on Tuesday, 24 December. All offices will reopen on Monday, 6 January 2025. To report air or water pollution, unsafe water activities in or on a river, lake or harbour, or make a general enquiry or information request during this time, call us 24/7 on 0800 800 401.

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Waikato River - wastewater discharges

Water quality in the Waikato River is affected by discharges of wastewater from a range of sources. We divide these into point sources (for example waste water from a factory pipe) and non-point sources (not from a single identifiable source, such as runoff from farm land and urban stormwater).

This page is about point source discharges, which are easier for Waikato Regional Council to manage because contaminants can be identified and measured and limits set.

Point source discharges to the river

Point source discharges are direct discharges from a fixed point. They include wastewater from industries, towns (for example sewage and stormwater) and dairy farms.

There are currently more than 80 point source discharges to the main stem of the Waikato River which have resource consents from Waikato Regional Council. On top of this, there are a further 1,600 discharges to the rivers and streams that drain into the Waikato River.

Of the discharges to the main Waikato River, about 30 are classed as large. These discharges are consented by Waikato Regional Council and include:

  • heated water from geothermal and gas/coal-fired power stations
  • geothermal waste water from a geothermal power station
  • treated sewage waste water from Hamilton city and several smaller settlements
  • treated waste water from a major pulp and paper mill, a major dairy factory and a large meat-works.

Wastewater affects water quality

Wastewater treatment improved considerably in the 1970s. However, since then the amount of some contaminants, such as the nutrients in certain sewage waste waters, going into the river has increased. This is because urban populations along its banks continue to grow.

Waikato Regional Council continues to work with consent holders to improve waste treatment when resource consents are renewed.

Less dairy effluent to water

Waste from around one-third of dairy farms in the region is treated in oxidation ponds before being disposed into waterways. Farm dairy oxidation ponds often contain high levels of bacteria. Scientists estimate that the waste from 20 farm dairy oxidation ponds contains the same amount of bacteria as the primary-treated sewage waste water from a medium-sized city.

Waikato Regional Council encourages dairy farmers to irrigate farm dairy effluent onto their land, rather than treating it in oxidation ponds and disposing of it to waterways.

In recent years there has been a major shift away from oxidation ponds to land treatment of dairy effluent. Five years ago, one third of dairy farms in the Waikato used land treatment. Today, two-thirds use land treatment, so much less farm dairy effluent now reaches waterways such as the Waikato River.