- In order to assess trends in attribute states (that is, whether improving or deteriorating), every regional council must:
- determine the appropriate period for assessment (which must be the period specified in the relevant attribute table in Appendix 2A or 2B, if given); and
- determine the minimum sampling frequency and distribution of sampling dates (which must be the frequency and distribution specified in the relevant attribute table in Appendix 2A or 2B, if given); and
- specify the likelihood of any trend.
- If a deteriorating trend is more likely than not, the regional council must:
- investigate the cause of the trend; and
- consider the likelihood of the deteriorating trend, the magnitude of the trend, and the risk of adverse effects on the environment.
- If a deteriorating trend that is the result of something other than a naturally occurring process is detected, any part of an FMU to which the attribute applies is degrading and clause 3.20 applies.
- If a trend assessment cannot identify a trend because of insufficient monitoring, the regional council must make any practicable changes to the monitoring regime that will or are likely to help detect trends in that attribute state.
The direction in clause 3.19(2) is a shift away from the traditional approach to analysing trends. Instead of looking for evidence of a statistically significant deteriorating trend, councils are now instructed to look for the likelihood that a trend exists. If it is more likely than not that a deteriorating trend does exist, they must act. Action under clause 3.19 involves first investigating and applying some analysis (3.19(2)a, 3.19(2)b and 3.19(3)) that allows councils discretion based on risk, and on whether it is possible to determine unnatural cause, before declaring an attribute is ‘degrading’, which then triggers a requirement to respond to halt or reverse under 3.20.
The reason for this change is that councils should not delay action until evidence for a trend is beyond doubt, as may have happened in the past.
If councils cannot identify a trend, they should consider whether it is because of insufficient monitoring. In general, monthly sampling is considered adequate for detecting meaningful trends in river and lake water quality. Due to the lower temporal variability in groundwater, quarterly sampling is often appropriate.
This is in line with Te Mana o te Wai and the direction to use the best available information, to act in the best interests of the health and well-being of the water body, especially when the impacts are uncertain.
This new direction lowers the threshold for councils to act. Where the conventional threshold for assessing statistical significance of a negative trend would be close to 5 per cent (a p-value between .1 and .01), this policy moves toward likelihood comparison, which is comparative (but not the same as) a p-value closer to 0.5. The conventional approach in statistical analysis is to assume no trend, unless the data shows a strong enough indication of one. The philosophy adopted here is to assume a non-stable trend exists. The first step of the analysis is to determine what direction that trend is in.
When there is no or incomplete data, use the best estimate of whether a trend exists and the likelihood of that trend being larger than 50 per cent. It is consistent with Te Mana o te Wai to take action immediately, whether this action be investigative, physical or regulatory, rather than wait for further information, even if hindsight shows a degrading trend did not exist. However, as discussed in the next section, Clause 3.20: Responding to degradation, it is important to assess the size of that trend, and its ecological consequences, alongside its direction, to determine the type and scale of action required.
Clause 3.19: Assessing trends
July 2022
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