Nau mai, haere mai.

Welcome to Te Puna Kōrero - our engagement and consultation hub.

As the new water services regulator for Aotearoa New Zealand, we are committed to ensuring all communities receive safe drinking water every day.

Three children drinking water

Taumata Arowai is not part of the Three Waters Reform programme looking to create new publicly owned water entities. Our role is to regulate rather than determine future changes to the delivery of water services.

Taumata Arowai is the new water services regulator for Aotearoa New Zealand. We are committed to ensuring all communities have access to safe and reliable drinking water every day. We also have an oversight role in relation to the environmental performance of drinking water, wastewater and stormwater networks.

The Water Services Act 2021 commenced in November 2021 and, as a result, Taumata Arowai is still in the process of developing secondary legislation and a suite of regulatory support tools. These will give effect to the relevant provisions of the Water Services Act 2021 and will assist regulated entities to comply with legislative requirements.

Taumata Arowai is committed to working with stakeholders to ensure its regulatory framework is fit for purpose. Te Puna Kōrero provides a contemporary, web-based platform for consulting on various proposals developed by Taumata Arowai.

To learn more about Taumata Arowai please click here.

 

Have Your Say

Your feedback will help to inform our decisions on the content of the documents we are consulting on.

For further information or questions about our consultations please email korero@taumataarowai.govt.nz

Proposed documents for consultation

  • Second Tranche of Drinking Water and Wastewater Network Environmental Performance Measures

    The Water Services Act 2021 includes requirements to monitor and report on the environmental performance of certain drinking water, wastewater, and stormwater suppliers and their operators. These requirements are designed to provide greater transparency about the performance of networks, the impacts they have on the environment and public health, and to contribute to the continuous and progressive improvement of the quality of water services. This discussion document provides...

    Closed 9 December 2022

    Second Tranche of Drinking Water and Wastewater Network Environmental Performance Measures
  • Notifiable risks or hazards

    Taumata Arowai is the water services regulator for Aotearoa New Zealand, working to ensure everyone has access to a safe and reliable supply of drinking water every day. To help realise this goal, it is important that Taumata Arowai is aware of issues that could affect the safety of drinking water being supplied to consumers, its sufficiency, its compliance and its acceptability in terms of its aesthetic properties (like taste, clarity and odour). Accordingly, the Water Services Act 2021...

    Closed 7 December 2022

    Notifiable risks or hazards
  • Drinking Water Quality Assurance Rules

    The Drinking Water Quality Assurance Rules (the Rules) set out the requirements a drinking water supplier must comply with to help ensure the drinking water they provide is safe. The Rules are ‘compliance rules’ for the purposes of the Water Services Act 2021. To address the large variations across different kinds of drinking water supplies, the Rules are categorised into different drinking water supply types. These have different modules and complexities assigned to them. ...

    Closed 28 March 2022

    Drinking Water Quality Assurance Rules
  • Drinking Water Standards

    The proposed Drinking Water Standards (the Standards) will replace the existing Drinking-water Standards for New Zealand (revised 2018). They set limits for contaminants and other characteristics of drinking water. The Standards apply to all drinking water supplies regardless of the nature of the source water and the number of people served by the supply. Detailed Summary Taumata Arowai is conducting a public consultation on drinking water standards for Aotearoa;...

    Closed 28 March 2022

    Drinking Water Standards
  • Drinking Water Acceptable Solution for Roof Water Supplies

    This Acceptable Solution can be used to demonstrate that certain roof water supplies comply with the requirements of the Water Services Act 2021. This Acceptable Solution may only be used where a networked community supply is not available to the buildings that will be supplied by the roof water supply. It is estimated there are between be 10,000 – 30,000 roof water supplies in Aotearoa, including many marae. Detailed Summary Taumata Arowai is running a public consultation on...

    Closed 28 March 2022

    Drinking Water Acceptable Solution for Roof Water Supplies
  • Drinking Water Acceptable Solution for Spring and Bore Drinking Water Supplies

    A number of marae, papakāinga, small communities, and camping grounds take drinking water from springs and bores and reticulate the drinking water to multiple properties. It is not currently known exactly how many of these supplies exist in New Zealand. This Acceptable Solution is designed for community water supplies where good quality spring or bore water is supplied to multiple dwellings and buildings. Detailed Summary Taumata Arowai is conducting a public consultation on...

    Closed 28 March 2022

    Drinking Water Acceptable Solution for Spring and Bore Drinking Water Supplies
  • Drinking Water Acceptable Solution for Rural Agricultural Water Supplies

    Rural agricultural drinking water supplies primarily provide stock water or irrigation water and at least 65% of the total supply must be for this purpose. These supplies can also provide drinking water to houses connected to the stock water or irrigation supply, generally to a storage tank on the consumer’s property. It is generally not economic to treat all water in a rural agricultural water supply at a centralised treatment plant. This Acceptable Solution provides a way of ensuring...

    Closed 28 March 2022

    Drinking Water Acceptable Solution for Rural Agricultural Water Supplies
  • Drinking Water Aesthetic Values

    The aesthetic values (properties) of drinking water that affect its acceptability to consumers, including its taste, odour, appearance and in some instances feel. Consumers will often be more aware of these values than the health-related limits that influence drinking water’s safety. Water is considered acceptable when its aesthetic values are not objectionable to most consumers. Detailed Summary Taumata Arowai is running a public consultation on Aesthetic Values for Drinking...

    Closed 28 March 2022

    Drinking Water Aesthetic Values
  • Drinking Water Network Environmental Performance

    The Water Services Act 2021 introduces new requirements to monitor and report on the environmental performance of certain drinking water, wastewater, and stormwater suppliers and their operators. These requirements are designed to provide greater transparency about the performance of networks, the impacts they have on the environment and public health, and to contribute to the continuous and progressive improvement of the quality of water services. ...

    Closed 28 March 2022

    Drinking Water Network Environmental Performance