Land use suitability tools and assessment processes for increasing land use diversity and delivering better community outcomes.
Project Details Ngā taipitopito
Collaborators Ngā haumi
AgResearch | Environment Canterbury | Environment Southland | GNS Science | Manaaki Whenua Landcare Research | NIWA | Plant & Food Research | Streamlined Environmental | Te Tumu Paeroa | Tipa and Associates | University Of Otago
Land use planning in New Zealand currently focuses on what a parcel of land is capable of producing, with the increasing use of regulatory limits. These limits will be more easily met when land use planning considers the conditions of water bodies downstream, and the economic, environmental, social and cultural values of the surrounding community.
We call this broader planning perspective ‘land use suitability’.
To enable this shift in perspective, we need more detailed understanding of the land’s natural attenuation processes, which reduce levels of contaminants like nitrogen and phosphorus, and the resilience of water bodies.
Land Use Suitability research is linking these natural processes with human interventions, mitigations and land-management choices, to make the consequences of our choices clearer and more predictable.