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Quarry Rehabilitation
The company's cement manufacturing operation at Westport involves quarrying the raw materials from a resource near Cape Foulwind. This quarry supplies the main component, limestone, and the secondary component, marl.

Quarrying operations can have a major impact on the surrounding environment, and on nearby communities. At Cape Foulwind the adjacent seal colony that attracts 100,000 visitors a year must also be a consideration.

In the mid 1980s Holcim carried out restoration work that mitigated the visual impact of the quarrying operations, and also began planting native species to restore the quarry surrounds to native bush. The quarry rehabilitation plan at this stage included the concept of indigenous forest, a lake within the area of the quarry workings, and adjacent wetlands.

These lily ponds
are part of a
larger reclamation
project at the
company's former
Wesport quarry

In the early 1990s Holcim began work with David Norton from Canterbury University School of Forestry. Dr Norton is Associate Professor at the School and is an expert in the ecology of New Zealand plant communities. Dr Norton supervised projects assessing the re-establishment of native species in the quarry environs. In 1992 he presented the report “Concept Plan for the Restoration of the Cape Foulwind Limestone Quarry and Environs to Indigenous Forest and Wetland”.

The report outlined rehabilitation in four zones: the coastal restoration zone, mainly farmland adjacent to Tauranga Bay; the wetland restoration zone of the planned lake and associated wetlands; the quarry restoration zone, areas of workings not flooded and quarry slopes; the inland restoration zone of land adjacent to the road and inland farmland. The report outlined the constraints on restoration, as well as giving a pathway to successful rehabilitation in parallel to continued quarrying.

The restoration plan encouraged the setting up of a nursery at Cape Foulwind to raise indigenous species in local conditions. This nursery is leased to local a nursery manager who provides Holcim with up to 50,000 plants a year on contract, as well as growing for general sale.

The decade since the Norton report has seen thousands of natives planted, mainly in the coastal restoration zone, and inland restoration zone. These plants are already converting parts of the quarry environs to fully restored indigenous vegetation.

The goal of restoring this area to a complete, functioning, natural ecosystem is well underway.

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Addington

Christchurch
New Zealand
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