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Pareora Berm Transition Project for Flood Resilience Enhancement

2.1 Contract overview The Pareora Berm transition will see the installation of 7,200 plants into mixed poplar and native plantings to strengthen the berms around an area known as Evan�s crossing on Pareora Ford road. We are looking for a supplier with a proven track record of good project management and delivery of qua…

Source ID: NZ-GETS-25074780

Scope overview

2.1 Contract overview The Pareora Berm transition will see the installation of 7,200 plants into mixed poplar and native plantings to strengthen the berms around an area known as Evan�s crossing on Pareora Ford road. We are looking for a supplier with a proven track record of good project management and delivery of quality targeted weeding and native enhancement works of this scale.

2.1.1 Background River berms and margins are the strips of land directly beside the river, or between the river and the stopbank. Berms have an important function in flood protection by adding capacity to the main river channel by carrying water when the river is high, slowing down the flood flow to mitigate erosion risk, and absorbing excess water into the ground.

Planting trees on these berms is essential for flood resilience and protection as they provide a buffer to slow floodwaters and prevent bank erosion. Currently, most river berms in Canterbury are choked with exotic weed such as Old Man's Beard which is likely to worsen with climate change. Weed infestation is a region-wide issue that compromises the health of trees and the performance of the berm during flood.

Environment Canterbury�s (ECan) annual river maintenance involves chemical spraying and mechanical control of a range of weeds, but it is difficult to keep up. A more sustainable method of controlling weeds is to both control the target species and manipulate the environment to the disadvantage of the weed species. This ultimately reduces future weeding efforts.

The Berm Transition Project is one of Environment Canterbury�s six Climate Resilience Programme of Flood Risk Management Projects which is part-funded by the Ministry for Business, Innovation and Employment's Kanoa - Regional Economic Development & Investment Unit (Kanoa � REDIU).

The goal of this project is to transform selected areas within the braided river berms into multi-functioning areas, increasing their value, resilience and function. These areas will then provide examples to inspire future management.

It takes time to build resilience and we have a transformational opportunity with the $10m of the funding to fuel this project to protect the health of our flood protection vegetation and accelerate the regeneration of this important green asset. We will achieve this with effective, strategic planting arrangements that will grow into dense, stratified riparian plantings

Statusawarded
CategoryEnvironment & Sustainability
CountryNew Zealand
Publish dateNov 9, 2021
Submission deadlineNov 26, 2021
Estimated value
Notice typeaward_notice
Sourcenz-gets-awards
BuyerEnvironment Canterbury
City

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OrganizationEnvironment Canterbury

Tags & Signals

river berm enhancementflood resilience plantingnative plant restorationweed control managementclimate resilience projectPareora Ford roadenvironmental sustainabilityberm transition
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