No date for draft basin plan

The chairman of the Murray Darling Basin Authority has refused to commit to when the draft basin plan will be released.

Communities around the basin are anxiously awaiting the draft plan, which will include the sustainable diversion limits that are expected to take water away from irrigators.

Despite media releases and authority documents indicating a mid-year release, Mike Taylor says it is impossible to be specific.

“It’s a very comprehensive and complex task and this is a very major undertaking and we’ve made it clear right from the beginning that we’re working as hard as we can to get this plan out and into the public arena,” he said.

Interpretive centre to showcase wetlands

The cultural and environmental values of the Barren Box wetland are set to go on display in a new education centre.

Long-term works are continuing to rehabilitate the 1,500 hectare swamp north-west of Griffith.

Rob Kelly from Murrumbidgee Irrigation says the works include revegetation and the preservation of Indigenous artefacts.

“We will continue this year with further direct seeding, another 300 or 400 hectares of direct seeding and also putting in facilities out there, some education facilities,” he said.

“So we’ll have an interpretive centre and we’ll also again be dealing with the local Indigenous community about the cultural values of Barren Box and how we can incorporate that into a cultural awareness centre.

“The interpretive centre will really be explaining the history and story of Barren Box. It’ll be used for education purposes. Not only that, we’ll also be putting bird hides out there so local bird groups and other interest groups can go out there and watch the birds”

Protected sites earmarked under basin plan

Two environmental sites in the Goulburn Murray region are among at least 18 areas that will be protected under the Murray-Darling Basin Plan.

The Murray-Darling Basin Authority is developing the plan to manage water throughout the country’s food bowl.

The environmental indicator sites include the lower Goulburn River floodplain and the Barmah-Millewa Forest.

The authority’s chairman, Mike Taylor, says the water requirements of the sites will be determined first, then extraction limits for irrigators will be worked out.

“Having set aside the water allocation for … the environmental water requirement, [we'll] determine what the sustainable diversion limit [is] for a wide range of human uses, principally irrigation,” he said.

“That diversion, of course, is a key feature of what the impact will be in a socioeconomic sense.”

Key Murray-Darling water sites chosen

The chair of the Murray-Darling Basin Authority says it is on track to deliver a new basin-wide plan by next year.

It has identified the key wetlands and ecosystems which will be made a priority for water.

More than 200 water stakeholders met in Canberra to hear the latest progress on a new basin-wide plan.

The chair of the authority, Michael Taylor, says 18 of the system’s key environmental assets have been identified.

They include Hattah Lakes, the Macquarie Marshes, the Barmah-Millewa Forest and the Lower Lakes.

“Having done that and actually addressing those environmental water requirements, of course the water that’s needed to do that sets what will then be left available for the sustainable diversion limits for irrigation and other purposes,” Mr Taylor said.

Danny O’Brien from the National Irrigators Council says he is worried agriculture is being overlooked and will not get the water it needs under the new plan.

“We’re very concerned that the whole plan is about the environment with very little attention being provided to the socioeconomic impacts,” Mr O’Brien said.

“We’re getting some comfort about that today from what the authorities are telling us, but we’re still very concerned with what they have to do under the Water Act.

“It’s pretty much environment first, second and third and people, irrigators and food production are a long way last.”

The Murray-Darling Basin Authority is yet to calculate the water allocations.

Exiting irrigators urged to determine skills

GrowSmart Training manager John Chase says gaining skill recognition is a good first step for irrigators who have taken an exit grant.

Almost 180 irrigators in the Riverland have taken the Federal Government’s small block irrigator exit grant, which includes up to $10,000 in funding for retraining.

Mr Chase says growers can work with an assessor to establish what skills they have and how they can be formally recognised.

“Growers are great business people, so they’ve got business skills, they’ve got planning skills, they’ve got people management skills, they’ve got financial skills, quite aside from production of whatever fruit they’re producing and all those other things as well,” he said.

“Some of those things can be translated into other industries if they’re looking to go to another area.”

Floodwaters won’t change irrigator allocations

Despite extra water from floods in New South Wales and Queensland entering the South Australian system within weeks, irrigator allocations will remain at 62 per cent.

But it is likely irrigators will start the next water season with a higher allocation than the last.

Latest figures from the Murray-Darling Basin Authority show that 290 billion litres of water should flow into South Australia via the Menindee Lakes over the next few weeks.

The assessment includes the first instalment of 257 billion litres from South Australia’s minimum 500 billion litre share in the Queensland floodwaters.

It also includes the state’s share of 33 billion litres from improved water availability in the River Murray catchment.

The Minister for the River Murray, Paul Caica, says the water will be held in reserve until South Australia’s total water resource picture becomes clearer.

Allocation relief for Murray irrigators

Victorian Murray irrigation towns have welcomed a 100 per cent water allocation for the first time in four years.

Late last week, Goulburn Murray Water announced final allocations for the irrigation season.

It said the 100 per cent Murray allocation was possible after heavy rains earlier this month.

The Moira Shire Mayor, Ed Cox, says it will result in an economic boost to the region.

“Farming is our number one generator for income in the shire and it’s had a significant impact on our shire with how we’ve battled for the last four years with the restrictions and the dry times, so it’s certainly been an issue,” he said.

Drought-hit farmers offer up irrigation entitlements

The prolonged drought has prompted 60 farmers in south-west New South Wales to offer their irrigation entitlements to the Federal Government under its buyback program.

They are offering to sell about 42,000 megalitres of water entitlements along irrigation channels in the Wakool area west of Deniliquin.

The estimated sale price is between $50 million to $60 million.

Murray Irrigation Limited has taken the offer to the Federal Government and its chairman, Stewart Ellis, says some of the sellers may retire rather than continue farming without water.

“They’ve assessed their own situations and given the tough years of drought and low water allocations, we’ve had two years of zero and then a 9 and now a 22 per cent allocation this year, so they’ve been particularly tough years on the farm,” he said.

“They’ve come forward on a voluntary basis, put forward their own proposal which has been assessed by Murray Irrigation and then put together into a proposal and taken to the Commonwealth Government for consideration.

“What the people are looking for is something over and above the market price of water entitlements.

“They’re not just looking at selling all of their water.

“They’re actually selling all of their water and disconnecting their farms permanently from a connection to our channel system, so they will truly be dryland farms in the future if this proposal is accepted.”

Mr Ellis says the sale would mean the closure of more than 100 kilometres of channels.

“The proposal is that the infrastructure like within Murray Irrigation’s channel system, the bridges, culverts, regulators, would be removed and the channels actually filled in, so it is a physical disconnection from the system,” he said.

“We would say this type of buyback is a more strategic approach because all of these schemes that have come forward for closure are either on the end of channel systems or on the end of spur channels, so there’s no-one actually irrigating on the channel below them so we can actually close down that section of channel, so in effect this type of buyback should be helping the rest of remaining irrigators because it leaves Murray irrigators with a smaller footprint and a more efficient delivery system as a result.

“We’re expecting something back from the Government this week and then we have a meeting arranged with these proponents on the 12th of April, so whatever the offer that comes from the Government will be passed onto the people, to the proponents of these shutdowns.

“Then we’ve got this meeting arranged on the 12th to ascertain how many of them want to be part of the deal and whether we’ve got a deal going forward.”

Water carryover rises

The Central Irrigation Trust (CIT) says higher access to allocations and changing trends in water management have led to big jump in the amount of water being carried over to next season.

Applications for carryover close tomorrow and the operations manager, Gavin McMahon, says CIT customers have applied to carryover some 70,000 megalitres, up from about 24,000 last season.

“The allocation’s this year at 62 per cent, and last year we were only in the 30s, so there is substantially more water around,” he said.

“Growers have also built up a bank of water over the last few years through being frugal and purchasing water as well, so I think at their disposal they’ve just had much water available from a number of sources and they’ve been able to carry that through.”

Irrigation trust seeks ‘strong link’ with new Murray Minister

The Central Irrigation Trust (CIT) says the incoming Murray-Darling Basin plan and sustainable diversion limits are the biggest issues to be discussed with the new River Murray Minister.

Paul Caica has taken over the portfolio, along with water security and environment, after the Nationals’ Karlene Maywald was ousted in last weekend’s state election.

CIT operations manager Gavin McMahon says it is important that Mr Caica, being a city-based MP, does not affect the level of communication and consultation.

“Obviously when you have a local minister they live within your electorate and it’s quite easy to see them. The new Minister obviously lives in a different locality, so those opportunities don’t present themselves,” he said.

“However, we just have to be proactive as a region and establish those contacts and links and just make sure that we have a strong link with the new Minister.”

SA Murray minister facing tough time: Wong

Federal Water Minister Penny Wong says her new state counterpart Paul Caica will face a tough time with the water and Murray portfolios.

Mr Caica is the new minister for Water, the River Murray and Environment in Labor’s third-term ministry in South Australia.

Two of the portfolios had been held by Nationals MP Karlene Maywald who lost her seat in the election.

Senator Wong is planning a meeting with Mr Caica.

“It’s a difficult portfolio because we’re in the middle of an enormous change,” she said.

“Until the most recent rains we’ve seen record lows, at the same time we’re managing a major change, a huge adjustment in the Murray-Darling.”

The new SA Agriculture Minister has talked up his credentials for the job, saying he has a better knowledge of the sector than rural Liberal MPs.

Michael O’Brien is now Minister for Forests and Regional Development.

He says his work in the agribusiness sector in the past makes him ideal for the job.

“I believe I’ve got a very well-rounded and deep understanding of the sector and I would say that I would have a better knowledge than probably even members of the Liberal Party that hail from rural electorates,” he said.

ACT moves to take control of Lake Burley Griffin

The ACT Government has tabled a bill which would give it control of all water resources on Commonwealth land, including Lake Burley Griffin.

The Commonwealth will still regulate recreation on Lake Burley Griffin but under the changes businesses or government agencies extracting water will have to pay the ACT rather than the Commonwealth.

The Commonwealth has agreed to transfer control but is yet to pass the necessary amendments.

Attorney General Simon Corbell says the changes should raise about $415,000 in revenue in the first year and $150,000 annually after that.

“This is not about users on Lake Burley Grffin, this is about the use and extraction of the water,” he said.

“It’s about pumping water from Lake Burley Griffin say for irrigation, about who can take how much and when and where, and those decisions – when this legislation has passed – will become decisions for the ACT.”

electricity-energy-and-utilities, energy , bega-2550

The Queensland Government is proposing to restrict irrigation and intensive agriculture under Wild Rivers declarations for the Lake Eyre Basin.

The State Government has pledged to include Queensland Channel Country rivers like the Cooper Creek system under the controversial laws.

Scott Buchanan, from the Department of Environment and Resource Management, says landholders are being asked to comment on a discussion paper by May.

“There are a lot of differences between the physical characteristics of this system and our normal wild river areas which are up on the cape and the Gulf,” Mr Buchanan said.

“This discussion paper is a bit of a first step to allow the community of the Lake Eyre Basin to have input into how they see Wild Rivers operating in their area.”

Mr Buchanan says some activities are likely to be restricted in areas close to rivers.

“There are some prohibited activities in terms of extraction of sand and gravel, unless there’s an existing allocation or unless the sand or gravel is for developing a house,” he said.

“There are also some restrictions on irrigated or intensive agricultural activities … there are some restrictions on aquaculture … but outside of the high preservation area those activities can continue.”

Irrigators welcome water projects funding

Murray Irrigation has welcomed its major share of $100 million worth of farm water saving projects announced by Water Minister Penny Wong last Friday, saying it was better late than never.

Its chairman, Stuart Ellis, says growers have two years to spend the $34 million.

The recent funding has been a boost on top of the current water allocation of 22 per cent compared with a 9 per cent allocation last year.

Mr Ellis say there are 124 farm projects seeking funding.

“Eighty-three of those are looking at upgrading their existing irrigation layouts, flood irrigation type layouts,” he said.

“We’ve got 37 projects looking at converting from flood irrigation to spray irrigation and there’s four projects looking to convert from flood to micro irrigation.”

Water pump sales flow cash for manufacturers in Punjab

Ludhiana, Mar 20(ANI): While declining water table in Punjab is causing worries to farmers and environmentalists, it has also become a major profit making opportunity for companies that manufacture submersible pumps.

Punjab is dependent on the monsoons for irrigation, but facing constantly lowering water table, submersible pumps are increasingly being used for agriculture. Their demand is expected to rise by additional 10 percent this year.

Girish Garg, an employee of Gargson, which manufactures submersible pumps, said that there is a rise in demand of high-power pumps.

“The water table of the area is going down. Accordingly, the horsepower capacity of the submersible pump motors are also increasing. Earlier only 10 pumps of 7.5 horsepower used to function in the entire area. Now, the areas closer to the rivers use 7.5 horsepower pumps; rest of the areas readily use 25-30 horse power pumps,” said Garg.

The constant decline has forced farmers to look for new options every year, which has added to their expenses.

“Every year we have to increase the depth of the pump by 10 feet. This increases our charges by Rs 50,000 and the electric load also increases, which in turn increase our overall expense. Every year we come to this fair to see which pump extracts ample water and is available at what price,” said Rashpal Singh, a farmer.

The agriculture sector”s growth in Punjab slowed down to a dismal 3.51 percent in 2008-09 due to dwindling water and soil resources, stagnating crop productivity.

That has caused a decline in the state”s contribution in the GDP from 23.47 percent in 2003-04 to 19.49 percent in 2008-09. (ANI)

Water allocations boost ‘expected’

The Central Irrigation Trust has welcomed yesterday’s announcement that River Murray irrigators in South Australia have had a slight increase in their water allocations.

They will now get 62 per cent of their entitlements – a rise of 7 per cent.

Operations manager Gavin McMahon says it is pleasing news but it is not a major surprise.

“It was expected that we would get some more,” he said.

“It has been quite wet in the upper catchment and last month there were quite significant rainfalls there so we are very pleased to see it.”

South Australia has been provided with about 90 gigalitres of improved river flows, although water volumes in the river remain low.

Meanwhile, communities around the lower lakes are remaining hopeful of floodwaters from Queensland making their way downstream.

Lesley Fisher, a farmer from near Lake Albert, says pelicans have returned to the area in recent days, in what she is hoping is a sign water may be on its way down the system.

She says the lake is on life support and needs the extra flows.

“They’ve been in drought for a long time and Menindee Lake is just as important a part of the environment as what we believe we are here.

“It will take a while for the water to come down, we are waiting and hoping that we will get something.”

Local workforce planned for Ord expansion

Leighton Construction says it will be relying largely on the local workforce rather than importing workers from Perth after securing the first major contract of the Ord Irrigation expansion.

The State Government yesterday awarded the contract for a 20 kilometre irrigation channel and road works to Leighton and joint venture partner Indigenous Business Australia.

Indigenous employment and community development were among the criteria used to select the companies.

Leighton Construction’s Project Director Stewart Dyson says they have been working with the Kununurra community for more than a year to ensure local Aboriginal people are job-ready.

“They were looking for the big players from the private industry to come in and give it all a bit of a shake-up to be honest, and deliver something different.”

“Previous projects undertaken have not delivered the high level of local content that’s been committed on this, or sustainable Indigenous outcomes.”

More Queensland floodwaters promised for SA

South Australian Premier Mike Rann says he has reached an in-principle agreement with Queensland and New South Wales for about 400 gigalitres of additional water from Queensland floods.

A similar volume of water has already been secured for the drought-affected Murray from New South Wales floods in January.

Mr Rann says water from Queensland is now flowing through the river system and should reach South Australia within six weeks.

“Basically there’s in-principle agreements already. Look, people want us to benefit, they want the river to benefit and I think there’s been a terrific spirit of cooperation between Queensland and us and New South Wales and us, so there’s still work being done because the volume of water is just massive,” he said.

“Our allocation is likely to be around 400 billion litres of extra water across the border from Queensland floodwaters. Now that extra 400 billion litres is on top of the 408 billion litres that’s currently on its way down to the lower lakes [at the Murray mouth]“.

Redmond sceptical

Opposition Leader Isobel Redmond says the Premier has claimed credit for the water deal but she believes South Australia would have received the flows regardless.

“It is simply a con by Mike Rann trying to convince the people of this state, four days out from an election, that he has such wonderful negotiating skills that he’s been able to secure water which we say he hasn’t done,” she said.

“So I’m calling on him to produce that water and produce a copy of the agreement so that we can see it.”

Opposition water spokesman Mitch Williams is of the same view.

“The water that we will get will be the water that New South Wales physically cannot keep,” he said.

“Mike Rann knows that there’s at least 400 gigalitres more than they can possibly keep that will come to South Australia and he’s made this outrageous claim that he actually negotiated.”

Water Security Minister Karlene Maywald says the cynics should stop deriding the Government for announcing more flows for the Murray in the final days of the election campaign.

“I think that everyone in South Australia should be batting us in on this because that’s what we need to do,” she said.

“Instead of fighting and squabbling amongst ourselves in this state, trying to muddy the water, trying to make the rules all this particular Government’s fault, when in actual fact the rules are something we’ve inherited over many, many, many, many, many decades and that do not serve South Australia well.”

Mr Rann says it is extra water for SA and anyone suggesting otherwise is wrong.

“New South Wales did not have to give up one single drop of water to us. But it’s about negotiating, it’s about doing the hard yards, it’s about actually going out there and doing deals which are about benefiting our state,” he said.

Barry Philp from the New South Wales Water Corporation says floodwaters are yet to reach the Menindee Lakes storage from Queensland.

He says that when another 60 gigalitres reach the Lakes, New South Wales will lose immediate control.

“Once we get to a trigger point with 640 gigalitres we come under Murray-Darling Basin Association Authority control and they work to supply South Australia with their entitlements,” he said.

“We’re about 580 GL at the moment and so that’s another 60 GL on top of what’s already there.”

Water authority defends Lake Boga floodgate decision

A crowd of excited Lake Boga residents turned out to watch the lake’s floodgates open yesterday afternoon, for the first time since the lake dried two years ago.

There has been criticism the decision to allow water to flow into the lake came without notice and did not allow the lakebed to be properly prepared for the water.

The lake will receive 10,000 megalitres in the next few weeks.

But Goulburn Murray Water’s Graham Hannan says there was only a small window of opportunity to start filling the lake, with irrigation demand suppressed by recent heavy rain.

“That same rainfall wetted the lake, so delivery was more efficient,” he said.

Murray irrigators allowed 62pc

Murray irrigators in South Australia have had their water allocations increased to 62 per cent of their full entitlements.

An improvement from 55 per cent to 62 per cent is possible because of higher river inflows.

The Department of Water, Land and Biodiversity Conservation says South Australia has been provided with about 90 gigalitres of improved flows.

Water volume in the River Murray remains low, with major dams at 30 per cent of capacity.

At this time last year, they were at 16 per cent.

In an average year, the storages would be at more than 50 per cent of capacity in early autumn.