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The Climate Litigation Database

Maniototo Environmental Society Inc. v. Central Otago District Council; Meridian Energy Ltd. v. Central Otago District Council and Others

Geography
Year
2009
Document Type
Litigation

About this case

Filing year
2009
Status
Remanded to Environment Court
Court/admin entity
New ZealandEnvironment CourtNew ZealandHigh Court of New Zealand
Case category
Suits against governmentsEnvironmental assessment and permittingRenewable projects
Principal law
New ZealandResource Management Act 1991
At issue
Appeal of successful challenge to a proposed wind farm
Topics
, ,

Documents

Summary

Applicants challenged the granting of resource consents to Meridian Energy for the construction of a wind farm using up to 176 wind turbines. The Environment Court of New Zealand conducted a cost-benefit analysis of the proposed wind farm and determined that the project did not comply with the Resource Management Act because the substantial adverse impacts on the natural landscape outweighed the positive factors, principally the large quantity of renewable energy. Meridian appealed the decision challenging the court’s use of cost-benefit analysis and consideration of alternative sites. The High Court of New Zealand allowed the appeal and remanded the case back to the Environment Court. While the High Court found that the Environment Court was permitted to use cost benefit analysis, it instructed the court to allow Meridian to give further information on alternatives and opportunity to present a market-based analysis of impacts. In addition, the High Court denied a cross-appeal alleging the court had erred in considering climate change impacts without first determining the extent to which climate change is caused by human activity. Before the Environment Court revisited the issue, Meridian announced that it had withdrawn its applications for resource consent.

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Group
Topics
Target
Policy instrument
Risk
Impacted group
Just transition
Renewable energy
Fossil fuel
Greenhouse gas
Economic sector