20 May 2022

Missile shaped fish screen hits the Rangitata River

From Country Life, 9:25 pm on 20 May 2022
A state-of-the art fish screening facility in mid-Canterbury prevents fish from entering the Rangitata diversion race intake at Klondyke and being swept into the 67km-long canal scheme.

Photo: Cosmo Kentish-Barnes

A state-of-the art fish screening facility at Klondyke in mid-Canterbury is preventing fish being swept out of their river and into a 67 kilometre-long canal scheme.

The canal is used for a combined farm irrigation and power generation scheme and is operated by Rangitata Diversion Race (RDR) Management.

A state-of-the art fish screening facility at Klondyke in mid-Canterbury is preventing fish being swept out of their river and into a 67 kilometre-long canal scheme.

Photo: Cosmo Kentish-Barnes

The fish screen system is the largest and most complex ever built in New Zealand and among the largest in the world.

It's built to capture more than 30 cubic metre per second of flow from the Rangitata River while safely returning fish to the river via a 190 metre bypass channel.  If they go with the flow the fish find their way back into the river within about two minutes.

"It's designed to help protect both the sports fishery, which is the salmon and trout, mainly salmon, and the native fish of which there's a variety of species," says RDR Management's Tony McCormick, who has overseen the project.

Tony McCormick and Brett Kelly from AWMA Water Control Solutions Photo:

He is very confident all the fish will get through the facility and won't get harmed in the process.

"Testing is going to be very challenging. We're still refining that process and we'll be doing close examinations for fin damage and that sort of thing using test fish, that we'll release and then capture."

Monitoring fish health will be conducted with support from Fish & Game "...and the local anglers who in a way sort of initiated this project with their discontent," Tony says.

Since Country Life visited the fish screening facility it has now gone under water and is successfully diverting fish back into the Rangitata River.

Photo: Cosmo Kentish-Barnes

Photo: Cosmo Kentish-Barnes

Photo: Cosmo Kentish-Barnes

A massive fish screen to keep fish in the Rangitata River

Photo: Cosmo Kentish-Barnes

A state-of-the art fish screening facility at Klondyke in mid-Canterbury is preventing fish being swept out of their river and into a 67 kilometre-long canal scheme.

Photo: Cosmo Kentish-Barnes

A state-of-the art fish screening facility at Klondyke in mid-Canterbury is preventing fish being swept out of their river and into a 67 kilometre-long canal scheme.

Photo: Cosmo Kentish-Barnes

Photo: Cosmo Kentish-Barnes

Photo: Tony McCormick

A state-of-the art fish screening facility at Klondyke in mid-Canterbury is preventing fish being swept out of their river and into a 67 kilometre-long canal scheme.

Photo:

A state-of-the art fish screening facility at Klondyke in mid-Canterbury is preventing fish being swept out of their river and into a 67 kilometre-long canal scheme.

Photo: Tony McCormick

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