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Hundreds in Northland protest fast-tracked sand mining operation

Author
RNZ,
Publish Date
Mon, 17 Mar 2025, 11:37am

Hundreds in Northland protest fast-tracked sand mining operation

Author
RNZ,
Publish Date
Mon, 17 Mar 2025, 11:37am

By Victor Waters - 

Hundreds of people in  took to Te 膧kau Bream Bay鈥檚 water and beaches on Sunday to protest a.

A flotilla of more than 50 watercraft converged from Whang膩rei Heads to Langs Beach to oppose the proposal to dredge nearly 8.5 million cubic metres of sand over the next 35 years.

Auckland-based sand mining company McCallum Brothers is currently in the process of applying for resource consent to extract sand. Their website states it is their way of being transparent with the public.

Local residents and environmental advocates say that the operation would cause irreversible damage to the seafloor, wildlife, and coastline.

Mary Sinclair from Save Bream Bay Sand said it was an incredibly successful day, bringing the many affected local communities together.

鈥淭he energy is really, really apparent, nobody is going to give up on this process, we are here for the duration and will take all the steps we can to protect Bream Bay as it is,鈥 Sinclair said.

鈥淚鈥檝e been coming to Langs beach for 70 years, I鈥檓 over 70 years old, we haven鈥檛 had the togetherness of this community that we鈥檝e got now. M膩ori and non-M膩ori, from Langs beach right through to Whang膩rei Heads.

鈥淚f you were on the water today you would have been amazed at the connections that were being made and what people were saying to each other, the community is getting into gear and we won鈥檛 stop.鈥

 The protesters are worried about the environmental impacts of the sand mining but company McCallum Bros says concerns will be addressed. Photo / Geoff Reid  
The protesters are worried about the environmental impacts of the sand mining but company McCallum Bros says concerns will be addressed. Photo / Geoff Reid

The protest comes after a petition of 14,000 signatures in opposition to sand mining at Te膧kau Bream Bay .

The proposed sand mining site lies 5km offshore from Waip奴, Langs, Uretiti, and Ruak膩k膩 beaches, which are vital habitats for sea life such as taraiti (New Zealand fairy tern), where there are 40 adult birds left, and endangered hawksbill turtles have been spotted there.

The boats hit the water where the sand mining will take place, about 5km offshore from Ruakaka Beach. Photo / Geoff Reid
The boats hit the water where the sand mining will take place, about 5km offshore from Ruakaka Beach. Photo / Geoff Reid

Sinclair said she also had concerns for the returning scallop population in Bream Bay.

鈥淲hat they鈥檒l do they鈥檒l continue to decimate what has begun to re-grow and we鈥檒l lose them to Bream Bay.

鈥淲hen you lose the scallops on the sea floor and lose other sea life on the sea floor then your fish start suffering, the fish have the food they need to grow and they鈥檒l disappear.

鈥淵ou take away the fish and have an impact on all the birds, we have species like dotterel and other birds in this area which have numbers that are declining and they鈥檒l disappear.鈥

 About 50 boats took to the water on Sunday to protest McCallum Brothers' sand mining plans for Bream Bay and were treated to fine weather. Photo / Geoff Reid
About 50 boats took to the water on Sunday to protest McCallum Brothers' sand mining plans for Bream Bay and were treated to fine weather. Photo / Geoff Reid

She said mining could also impact Bream Bay鈥檚 enclosed sand system.

鈥淭hey take sand from here it will not refill from outside and then you鈥檒l start altering what happens with the waves and the water which will start altering the sand dunes.

鈥淚f you look at the ecological impact here they will have an impact on every part of that going forward, particularly if it鈥檚 for the next 35 years.鈥

The 鈥淪ave Bream Bay Sand鈥 advocate encouraged the McCallum Bros to look at other sand alternatives.

She said sand mining from the sea floor is a practice that鈥檚 declining internationally because of it鈥檚 environmental impacts.

鈥淲e all want the New Zealand economy to grow, that鈥檚 not a question, we know that for that we need concrete and need more roads.

鈥淏ut we also know sand can be manufactured from aggregate we know that there are other sources of sand on land that are being quarried and there鈥檚 no need to take it from the sea floor.鈥

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