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100 percent fish-friendly pump to be installed in Aka Aka

3 min read

Waikato Regional Council project manager Richard Dodera on-site with the new fish-friendly pump for Mangawhero pump station. Photo: Supplied

A new 100% fish-friendly screw pump will be installed in Aka Aka, near Rangiriri – a first of its kind in New Zealand.

The Archimedes screw pump, which is 10 metres in length and 1.6 metres in diameter, was built by FishFlow Innovation in the Netherlands and arrived in the country at the beginning of June.

“It’s an impressive piece of kit,” said Waikato Regional Council project manager Richard Dodera, “even for someone like me who has been working around different types of pumps for a while now.”

The pump will push out up to 520 litres per second during a flood event and provide safe passage for long and short-fin eels. It’s so big you could probably put a shark through one if we had them in our catchments.”

The Archimedes screw pump, which will be installed at the Mangawhero pump station, is the first of five pump upgrades for the Waikato region. The current infrastructure is due for replacement and the old flood pumps do not enable safe downstream passage for native fish.

The council received $4.48 million in funding from Kānoa – Regional Economic Development and Investment Unit (formally the Provincial Development Unit) for the $7 million upgrade project as part of the Government COVID-19 response to help stimulate the construction and environmental industries and economy. The project is expected to create 29 jobs over 3.5 years, including in the construction of purpose-built pump stations to house the new pumps.


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FishFlow Innovation is a worldwide leader in innovative fish-friendly products for passage and deterrence.

Dodera said a work colleague had visited the Netherlands and told him about the new technology.

“He said it might be worth checking out, so we had a look at it online and got in touch with the people. We soon realised that their technology fits our purpose, especially for the regulations of fish passage.”

The cost of the construction of the pump in the Netherlands and its transportation was about $150,000.

“In the long run, the screw pumps end up being cheaper than the old axial flow pumps because of the operational costs over their lifetime. That is the level of detail we look at – the whole-of-life cost. They’re light, so don’t require a lot of power to operate, they’re very simple so don’t require much maintenance, and another massive win is they don’t require a weed screen that needs regular clearing.”

Integrated Catchment Management Committee co-chair Stu Husband said the Dutch had been fighting floods and sea level rise for many thousands of years and their engineering expertise was well sought-after around the world.

“These pumps are 100% fish-friendly, which is something we here in New Zealand haven’t quite mastered yet for our mature longfin eel species, although there is some good work going into that.

“The regional council has about 182 pump stations in the Waikato that help protect the communities’ lives and livelihoods. It is currently developing a regional infrastructure fish passage strategy, which will identify priority pumped catchments for fish passage and the appropriate measures to do so, such as fish-friendly pumps.”

The council has also partnered with MacEwans Pumping Systems to develop fish-friendly impellors for retrofitting currently installed older pumps. For more information on Waikato Regional Council’s five upgrades to fish-friendly pumps and other projects the council has received government funding for in response to COVID-19, visit waikatoregion.govt.nz/shovel-ready.

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