Meridian Energy Secures Draft Approval for Lake Pūkaki Contingent Storage Access
Meridian Energy secures draft approval to unlock Lake Pūkaki contingent storage
Meridian Energy (ASX: MEZ) has received a draft decision from New Zealand’s Fast-track Panel granting access to Lake Pūkaki hydro storage between 518 and 513 metres above sea level for a three-year period. The approval allows the company to access this water before the point where Transpower estimates a 4% risk of electricity shortage.
The draft decision also permits permanent rock armouring installation at Pūkaki Dam to protect against wave erosion when operating the lake at lower levels. The Panel must release its final decision by 3 July 2026.
When big ASX news breaks, our subscribers know first
What is contingent storage and why does it matter for electricity markets?
Contingent storage refers to water reserves in hydro lakes held back specifically for emergency supply situations. New Zealand’s electricity grid relies heavily on hydroelectric generation, making these reserves critical during dry periods when natural inflows decline.
Access restrictions exist to preserve water for genuine security-of-supply events, creating a trade-off between operational flexibility and maintaining an emergency buffer. Earlier access to contingent storage allows generators like Meridian to smooth electricity supply during tight periods, but reduces the volume available if a more severe shortage develops later.
For investors, contingent storage policy directly affects Meridian’s generation capacity and wholesale electricity price exposure during dry periods, when spot prices typically spike due to supply constraints.
Meridian commits to voluntary restraint through 2026
Despite the draft approval, Meridian proposes, if the draft decision is confirmed, to voluntarily restrict access to 2.5 metres (half of the five metres) of contingent storage as accessible only during heightened supply risk for the remainder of 2026. This voluntary restriction responds to concerns raised by commenters during the Fast-track process about potential overuse of emergency reserves.
The company cited the positive hydro storage outlook for Winter 2026 as context for the decision. Meridian plans stakeholder discussions through 2026 on contingent storage access.
Voluntary Storage Restraint
Despite securing approval to access five metres of contingent storage, Meridian proposes, if the draft decision is confirmed, to voluntarily restrict access to 2.5 metres through the remainder of 2026, treating the other half as only accessible when there is a heightened risk to security of supply.
The voluntary commitment demonstrates regulatory awareness and stakeholder management, balancing commercial interests with community expectations around emergency water reserves.
Meridian’s stakeholder management approach around contingent storage reflects a broader governance posture recognised externally: the company recently received its S&P Dow Jones sustainability ranking placing it in the top 10% of global utilities, the only New Zealand company to achieve that distinction in the latest assessment.
Dam resilience upgrade approved alongside storage access
The draft decision includes permanent approval for rock armouring at Pūkaki Dam, protecting the structure from wave erosion when operating the lake at lower levels. This infrastructure investment supports long-term operational flexibility by removing a potential physical constraint on low-lake operations.
The armouring approval complements the storage access by ensuring Meridian can safely operate Lake Pūkaki across a wider range of water levels without compromising dam integrity.
The next major ASX story will hit our subscribers first
What comes next for Meridian’s Lake Pūkaki plans
Key dates and next steps for the approval process:
- 3 July 2026 – Fast-track Panel must release final decision confirming or modifying the draft approval
- During 2026 – Meridian will hold discussions with electricity industry stakeholders on contingent storage access policy
- Remainder of 2026 – Voluntary restriction on 2.5 metres of storage remains in place regardless of final approval
Investors should monitor the July decision for confirmation of the three-year access period. Meridian’s substantive application is publicly available on the Fast-track website.
The Lake Pukaki storage approval sits alongside a series of regulatory and development milestones Meridian is pursuing as part of its $3 billion renewable energy programme, which includes the recently consented 120MW Bunnythorpe Solar Farm in Manawatu and a pipeline of projects running through to 2030.
Don’t Miss the Next Utilities Breakout
Join 20,000+ investors receiving FREE ASX news and analysis delivered to your inbox within minutes of release. Get breaking announcements plus expert commentary the moment market-moving news drops. Click the “Free Alerts” button at Big News Blast to stay ahead on utilities sector developments before the market reacts.
