Lake Rotorua Short Films
Motu has created two short films to illustrate some of the issues around declining water quality in Lake Rotorua. The films contribute to our research programme Nutrient Trading and Water Quality, and were designed to accompany our environmental trading game.
The films feature dairy farmer Jamie Paterson from Hamurana, north-east of Lake Rotorua, and three Maori landowners and caretakers from Te Arawa, tangata whenua in the Rotorua region. All have knowledge of the prototype system through their involvement in our stakeholder group, the Nutrient Trading Study Group, but were free to present their own views of the proposed system and its implications. We contracted Jess Feast, a Wellington filmmaker, to conduct the interviews and create the films.
The films do not promote the nutrient trading system. We have created them to deepen understanding, so that people in the Rotorua catchment are better equipped to choose between different options for addressing lake water quality. Environment Bay of Plenty will decide later this year whether to actively consider replacing their existing nutrient regulation with a catchment-wide trading system.
We have also written a brief introductory slideshow for people less familiar with the water quality problem. You can click on the link below to download a transcript of the films for wider discussion.
Introductory slideshow
’What’s the problem? An introduction to water quality issues in the Lake Rotorua catchment’ (PDF, 755KB)
Transcripts
Transcripts - Lake Rotorua short films (PDF, 200KB)
Jamie Paterson: Dairy farmer
Te Arawa: Maori landowners
These films are available on DVD for a small charge to cover materials. Please contact Marianna Kennedy if you would like to receive a copy.
Go back to Nutrient Trading and Water Quality.