Are new dams an answer to the water crisis?

June 11, 2020
Issue 
The Burrendong Dam empties at speed because water sharing plans allow it to.

The New South Wales and federal governments say that building new dams and raising the walls of others are the answer to the stateā€™s water crisis. But are they? Water experts advise that such large infrastructure projectsĀ do not necessarily save water, but instead divert water to irrigation, potentially killing rivers and leaving communities more vulnerable to water insecurity.

Ninety NSWĀ towns facedĀ the prospect of running out of water last summer. FarmersĀ inĀ the nationā€™s food bowl (the Murray-Darling Basin) faced ruin as water pricesĀ soared.Ā As the water market prioritises supply to those able to pay the price, in the Upper Darling River nearly 80% in the northern catchment ended up in the hands of two corporate irrigators.

At the same time, the Baaka (DarlingĀ River)Ā ceased to flow, the Menindee Lakes became a dustbowl and millions of fish rotted. While the fish killsĀ received significant attention, little was given to theĀ people who rely on river flowsĀ for their survival.

Such is the enormity of theĀ inlandĀ water crisis that whole communities were left without safe drinking water. Conditions in some Aboriginal communities are now so bad that senior researchers from the Jumbunna Indigenous House of Learning, Ruth McCausland and Alison Vivian, say that on the Baaka is as low as 37Ā yearsĀ for men and 42 for women.

The federal and NSW governments have decided to allocateĀ Ā toĀ build more dams and raise storage capacity atĀ Wyangala Dam in centralĀ west NSW and Dungowan Dam near Tamworth. They also want new dams built in drought-stricken northern NSW.

But will more damsĀ turn around the Murray-Darling Basin water crisis? A brief look at the water managementĀ failuresĀ would suggest not.Ā 

Enough dams already

As The Australia Instituteā€™sĀ Ā put it: ā€œIt may seem obvious, but building new dams doesnā€™t make it rain. Even if it does rain, we already have plenty of empty dams where the water can go."

Mel Gray of Healthy Rivers Dubbo told Ā鶹“«Ć½ that Burrendong Dam, one of the biggest in NSW, empties at speed ā€œbecause the rules in the water sharing plan allow it to ā€” encourage it too," despite its enormous capacity of 1188 billion litres. The BurrendongĀ dam supplies 70% of Dubboā€™s water needs (8 billion litres a year) andĀ has nearly bottomed out three times. ā€œIn the summer of 2019/20 plans were in place to suck the dead water from the very bottom of the dam,"Ā Gray said.

ā€œThe river below [the town of] Warren [north-west of Dubbo] was allowed to dry up and that was followed by the massive deaths of native fish, turtle, mussels and other wildlife. People below Warren were left with no access to water from the river for their domestic and stock needs.ā€

Healthy Rivers Dubbo is also opposed to plans for a new weir at Gin Gin on the Macquarie River, saying it will result in a 25 billion litres a year loss of water for the environment.Ā 

The NSW government knows that the Macquarie is over allocated, Gray said. ā€œIt is evident from NSWā€™sĀ  that while Burrendong is one of the biggest dams in state, the irrigation industry has developed to a size where the natural capacity of the river has been exceeded. There is simply too much water being sucked out.

ā€œThe most effective, common sense way to address water security issues in the Macquarie Valley is to look at the glaring problems with the rules in the water sharing plan, not to pour many tens of millions of public dollars into a monstrous structure that will only benefit a privileged few.ā€Ā 

The over allocation of water from rivers in NSW is a key concern for scientists, who have just published their views in theĀ . Lead author Celine Steinfeld, a member of the Wentworth Group of Concerned Scientists, said: ā€œIt was clear that water in the Macquarie had been over allocatedā€. Much of the problem is created by a ā€œcredit ruleā€ which guarantees water allocations of projected inflows that are highly variable and declining rapidly.Ā ā€œThe credit rule is essentially allocating clouds ā€” water that hasnā€™t even fallen in the catchment yet,ā€ on June 6. These problems are repeated across the state.

International studiesĀ confirm thatĀ theĀ supply-demand cycle, where increasing water supply leads to higher water demand,Ā is a problem. ā€œOver-reliance on reservoirs increases the potential damage caused by drought and water shortage,ā€ saidĀ Ā of Uppsala University in Sweden in 2018.

Expensive

Dams areĀ alsoĀ expensive.Ā °Õ³ó±šĢżupgrade ofĀ Dungowan Dam near TamworthĀ involves raising its capacity from 6 to 22 gigalitres. The additional 16 gigalitres is estimated to cost $480 million, or $30 million per gigalitre. To put that in perspective, the Department of Agriculture and Water Resources budgetsĀ $3 million per gigalitre for its current water recovery, according to aĀ cost analysis conducted byĀ .

More often than not, dams in regional Australia do not provide value for money. Over the past 30 years, only private dams, eachĀ several square kilometres in size and financed by the governmentā€™s water efficiency grants schemes, have been built. Politicians doĀ not like toĀ talk much about these dams, given that they do not help drought-stricken towns, struggling riversĀ and down-stream water users.Ā Any such state-funded infrastructure project would require higher environmental and economic assessment benchmarks, as well as public consultation and scrutiny.

The National Water Initiative states that all water infrastructure proposals must ā€œcontinue to be assessed as economically viable and ecologically sustainable prior to the investment occurringā€. But the NSW government is determined to circumvent lengthy environmental approvals, land purchases and business cases toĀ beginĀ theĀ construction of these new public damsĀ by 2021.

Altering rivers

The (WCD) argues that: ā€œDams fundamentally alter rivers and the use of a natural resource, frequently entailing a reallocation of benefits from local riparian users to new groups of beneficiaries at a regional or national level.

ā€œIn too many cases an unacceptable and often unnecessary price has been paid ā€¦ especially in social and environmental terms, by people displaced, by communities downstream, by taxpayers and by the natural environment.ā€

Among the environmental concerns associated with large water storage is the damage they cause to water quality within the storage and downstream. These include raised salinity and deoxygenation, which leads to toxic blue green algae blooms which impact on theĀ humanĀ health, livestock and wildlife.

Significant changes to floodplains and river flowsĀ have also badlyĀ affected aquatic life, habitat and wetlands.Ā Director of the Centre for Ecosystem Science at the University ofĀ NSW Professor Richard Kingsford has raised the alarm over the viability of the internationally significant Macquarie Marshes where 3000 hectares of reed beds burned in the 2019 bushfires. The loss and degradation have caused a significant drop inĀ theĀ population of native water-dependent species.

The case for building new dams runsĀ counter to theĀ terms of theĀ Murray-Darling Basin Plan. If more water is diverted, for example via a new dam, then an equivalent amount of water needs to be taken out of irrigation somewhere else. If that doesĀ notĀ happen, the government is reneging on theĀ BasinĀ Plan, opening itself to potential legal challenges by affected water users.

Inspector General of the Murray-Darling Basin Plan Mick Keelty, in his recent report on the basin, highlighted a 50% decline in inflows in the past 20 years, likely to be due to climate change.Ā 

°Õ³ó±šĢż released a report in May confirming that there will be longer, more frequent and intense droughts. Meanwhile, governments have been at pains to silence or ignore publicĀ discussion ofĀ the impact ofĀ climate change, saying that natural causes are to blame for lower inflows.

ā€œWhen working out how much water to sell every year, the NSW government does not take into account any rainfall and inflow data from before 2004,ā€ Gray said. ā€œIt chose to only look at last centuryā€™s rainfall patterns, when it was a lot wetter. Many communities in the Murray-Darling Basin hold fears over their future, with more frequent and extreme weather events.ā€

The inconvenient truth for governments is that there is no going back to pre-1950s weather conditions.Ā Their failure toĀ stop the corporate over-extractionĀ of water from rivers,Ā or to enforce national water sharing rules,Ā combined with the lack ofĀ climate policy,Ā means that theĀ water crisisĀ willĀ intensify.Ā Building damsĀ is 1950ā€™s thinking: more dams will only dig us into a deeper hole.

[Tracey Carpenter is an activist with .]

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