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Abstract
There is an increasing demand for water resources in the Canterbury region. The
impact of this demand has lead to unacceptable minimum river flows, which has
resulted in adverse affects to river ecology. In an effort to resolve this problem water
storage projects have gained considerable attention. However, in order to consider all
values of the impact of water storage projects, a systematic way of implementing an
ecosystem services approach is developed. This ecosystem services approach
coupled with various appropriate analytical methods are developed for the purposes
of evaluating the cost-effectiveness of water storage projects and the sustainability of
river systems impacted by water storage projects. For the purposes of evaluating the
cost-effectiveness of water storage projects it is argued that cost utility analysis
should be applied through an ecosystem services index, which is constructed from
the aggregation of normalized indicators that represent each ecosystem service and
preferential weights for each ecosystem service. The evaluation of sustainability is
considered both according to its weak and strong definitions. Weak sustainability is
evaluated by a non-declining ecosystem services index over time. Strong
sustainability is evaluated by the elicitation of threshold levels or safe minimum
standards where an ecosystem service, as represented by an indicator, should not
pass below. These analytical methods developed are subsequently applied to the
Opihi River, which is a river system located in Canterbury that has been
hydrologically modified and impounded by the Opuha Dam scheme. The application
of the analytical methods to the Opihi River provides a few preliminary results.
Further data collection is required to fully determine the cost-effectiveness of the
Opuha Dam and the sustainability of the Opihi River impacted by the dam scheme.