12:00a.m. 19th May 2008
Dams versus desalination: which is the better alternative to secure water supplies for the parched south-east?
Debate has raged since the government unveiled its controversial plan to build the $1.7 billion Traveston Dam and has been reignited with the admission that water prices are set to soar due to a blow-out in infrastructure costs.
The government’s $9 billion water grid is expected to force average household water bills on the Sunshine Coast up by almost $200 by 2012-13.
Other households in the south-east will be slugged even more as taxpayers pick up the tab for hundreds of kilometres in interconnecting pipelines, two new dams, a desalination plant at Tugun and a new recycling scheme.
The government claims its plan will drought-proof the region and give residents water security but not everyone is convinced.
Both the coalition and the government acknowledge that dams alone will not provide enough water to meet future demand.
The water commission’s long-term strategy states that climate change may have a “dramatic impact” on dam supplies and it aims to ensure desalination and purified recycled water cater for up to 30% of the region’s water needs by 2056.
The commission has already identified six sites – including two on the Sunshine Coast and one at Bribie Island – for investigation for future desalination plants.
It also supports an increase in the use of water from rainwater tanks and “giving careful consideration to other local supply sources such as rainwater harvesting and recycling”.
The coalition’s recently released water policy advocates taking some of these steps sooner rather than later.
It would build a $1.19 billion desalination plant at Bribie Island powered by renewable energy immediately, limit the use of recycled water to industrial and agricultural purposes and provide incentives for households, businesses and developers to embrace stormwater harvesting and new technologies.
Most notably, it would dump the Traveston Dam.
In an interesting exchange of traditional territory, the coalition claims its policies are more environmentally friendly while the government argues that the dam is necessary, at least in part on economic grounds.
Minister for infrastructure and deputy premier Paul Lucas said the coalition’s proposals would provide less water and cost taxpayers dearly because desalination was a far more expensive, energy-intensive option.
Mr Lucas also claimed the coalition was proposing to rob the Mary Valley economy of a much-needed shot in the arm by denying it the benefits of the dam.
“There has been substantial decline in the dairy industry in the Mary Valley prior to Traveston being announced and to pull out the potential of several billion dollars worth of construction expenditure would be a great negative for that industry,” he said. “I think there is a quiet change in the community – business and residents are seeing that the dam will mean an enormous injection into the economy.”
If he is correct, it has been missed by Kevin Ingersole of the Save the Mary River Coordinating Group who remains vociferously opposed to the dam and said to suggest the valley would not survive without it was rubbish.
“The best soils in Queensland are found in this valley – you can grow anything here – it was a huge producer of small crops before the dairy industry took off,” he said.
“Everybody knows that a dam is a big concrete wall and I suppose if you were in the concreting business you would benefit but a desalination plant would employ a lot of people too – it would just be different jobs in a different area.”
Mr Lucas’s claims about the economic benefits did not wash with the Sunshine Coast Environment Council either.
General manager Ian Christesen said the statements had a distinctly desperate ring about them.
“I think it is horrendous that he has intimated that rural production was not viable in the Mary Valley and the economy won’t survive without the dam,” he said.
Dam opponents are also sceptical about the broader argument that it is a much cheaper option than desalination.
They say the government has ignored the social and environmental cost and its figures failed to factor in the cost of lost production and the expense of transporting water supplies hundreds of kilometres from the source.
Independent experts also rejected suggestions that the cost of desalination made it a much less attractive alternative, pointing to the Perth plant as an example.
The wind-powered plant in Perth was built for $387 million and has been operating since 2006.
Last year the WA government announced plans for a second $1 billion plant which is expected to come on line around 2011 and produce water for about $1.90 per kilolitre.
The two desalination plants will push up household water prices in Perth by $30 a year from 2008/09.
Recent Comments
Here in SE Queensland, most states, with massive increases of population cannot supply the wants and needs, not because of global warming but the ineptness of state governments no planning and creating infrastructure for the future. That is the cause of water shortages!
So what is the future for more dams or developing desalination along the coastline?
Desalination requires massive amounts of base load power supplied through coal or nuclear power stations. The Greenies dilemma is they are anti coal and nuclear, hence the mute state of their talking heads.
What about the Bradfield scheme of the 1930s water touted by Peter Beattie a few years back, a similar scheme promoted in Western Australia by the Liberal Opposition?
Whatever way we jump with water supply for this nation it must be a national plan not like the past a state problem, the distribution of power is operation in the eastern states now it is water storage that needs solving.
We do not have a century to get this right, nor half a century maybe on two decades, there must be greater storage and transfer of water during seasonal overloads like in monsoon areas of North Queensland. It will cost billions upon billions! Adjustments to lifestyles are necessary to develop the future, we, as our grandparents and parents sacrificed to give us what we have today.
Just jokes. The only water problem we have is a lack of security around our water supplies to keep the Goerge Street thieves away from it.
It does make me curious, though, as to why we need to dig/build deep holes to hold water when there's a pretty big puddle to the east of us.
At least in the "bad old days" of the Lib?Nats Govt we had a real infrastructure development plan for this once great State. Roll on the revolution!
Sometimes I just think that our political system encourages short-sighted planning. In Japan, a company has a 500 year business plan strategy. Can you imagine us doing that?
Let's not forget that the plan for the western corridor pipeline (part of the grid) is to feed the water inefficient power stations and to free up ag land for urban development (Brisbane & Lockyer Valleys) and even Beattie said this will push the crops up to the Darling Downs.
I have a preference of tanks and then in principle, De-Sal however its current technology is atrocious.
When we consider how close we are to Asia, the mega growth of their population and our vast open spaces, our food prices in the decades to come will sky rocket because Asia's demand will push prices up.
Has anyone tried to buy the best quality tuna from our Mooloolaba outlets or other fish markets on the coast lately? We can't buy top grade tuna and not because we don't catch any but because Japan pays a fortune for it - recently $65,000 for a fish or $231 / kilo - unbelieveable.(http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2008/01/05/2132404.htm)
So in summary;
1) Large water tanks
2) Desalination only if the technology changes significantly - greater than a 200% efficiency (I don't want it even if we are told it will only use renewable energy)
3) No Traveston Dam and I am not saying no to any dams, it is just that Traveston will be extremely inefficient
This valley has no dwellings,has a substancial east west wall feature and a natural bluff within 500 metres of the current dams southern entrance.
The storage capacity of this area depending on the height of the new dam would be considerable and would allow the use of existing infrastructure .Obviously geotech surveys would need to be done. But Has this option ever been considered and explored.My bet is it would have the potential to hold and supply far in excess water than the Traverston dam could ever and would be a cheaper option for tax payers and water users of the south east and beyond.Have a look and think about it next time you are driving north along the range to Montville.
"God created dam sites and we owe it to him to build dams on them."
Not sure if this helps the debate but we must find solutions to the water problem or put a Mexican proof fence at the border.
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