A pig farm in Waikato has been hit with the largest fine in the 34-year history of the Resource Management Act after repeatedly discharging raw effluent into streams feeding the Waihou River.
Rawhiti Environmental Park was fined $437,000 in the Hamilton District Court last week after being convicted on eight charges.
The penalty followed months of persistent non-compliance, with Waikato Regional Council officers conducting 50 inspections of the farm between February and October 2023.
During more than half of those visits, untreated effluent was found spilling from the farm’s infrastructure onto surrounding land and into the headwaters of the Patuwhao and Hotahika streams.
The contamination caused significant harm to local waterways, with a council ecologist reporting that the affected streams supported diverse fish and macroinvertebrate species, including at-risk populations, and likely suffered serious impacts from the toxic discharge.

In August 2023, the council took the rare step of seeking an Interim Enforcement Order from the Environment Court, forcing the piggery to immediately stop discharges and reduce stock numbers to lower effluent volumes.
But another major overflow occurred just three days after the order was granted, prompting further health warnings to water users.
Regional compliance manager Patrick Lynch described the offending as "appalling".
"We simply have not had a case this bad before. The scale and frequency of these discharges, the repeated failure by the piggery owner to comply with resource consent and environmental regulation over so many months. It was terrible," he said.

“There was an extreme impact on the environment and community, which has been reflected in the unprecedented level of fine imposed by the court."
Alongside the penalty, the court also issued an Enforcement Order prohibiting any future unlawful discharges and requiring the company to address ongoing environmental risks.
Waikato Regional Council said that management at the piggery had since improved and effluent systems were now operating more responsibly, though some odour complaints continued.
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