On 30 August 2007, the New Zealand Fish and Game Council and the New Zealand Recreational Canoeing Association lodged an application with the Ministry for the Environment for a Water Conservation Order to protect the Hurunui River. On 14 August 2009, the Special Tribunal considering the application recommended to the Minister that a conservation order be granted for the North Branch of the Hurunui River but not the South Branch. On 2 September, Whitewater NZ lodged an appeal of the Tribunal's decision with the Environment Court in order to include the South Branch of the Hurunui River.
Water project
The Hurunui Water Project has applied to Environment Canterbury, the regional council responsible for administering the river, for resource consents to dam the river and to take water for irrigation. The proposed scheme involves a weir that will raise the level of Lake Sumner, a dam and lake on the south branch of the river and an intake on the main stem of the river. In October 2009, the Hurunui Water Project said it would delay the processing of its applications for resource consents for up to a year so that the Canterbury Water Management Strategy could address the issue of water storage. A march planned in Christchurch as a protest to the scheme still went ahead as scheduled two days after the announcement. As well as hundreds of protest marchers, kayakers and fishers travelled down the Avon River. Sam Mahon, a Canterbury-based artist concerned about water pollution, made a bust of Environment MinisterNick Smith out of dairy-cow dung in order to publicise the campaign to stop the Hurunui River from being dammed for irrigation. In February 2010 the Hurunui Water Project announced that it would reactivate the resource consent process. On 16 November 2010, the Hurunui Water Project lodged a High Court appeal of Environment Canterbury's decision to make the damming of the Hurunui River a non-complying activity in the Canterbury Natural Resources Regional Plan. In September 2012 the public notification of resource consent recommenced. The scope includes the construction of four dams on the Waitohi river, extraction of up to of water from the main stem of the Hurunui river, extraction of up to from the Waitohi River, run-of-river hydro-power generation, and storage of of water in other dams on the plains. By comparison the existing flow of the Hurunui river is and low-flow of. https://web.archive.org/web/20130219114350/http://ecan.govt.nz/publications/Plans/cwms-strategic-assessment-hurunui-waiau.pdf Submissions close 5 November 2012 at http://ecan.govt.nz/news-and-notices/notices/pages/CRC120687,CRC120695,CRC120691,CRC120696,CRC120692,CRC120694,CRC122547,CRC120675,CRC130467HurunuiWaterProjectLimited.aspx.