Reminder to users who do not have telemetry installed that they must update usage data in iWas on a monthly basis when taking
water as per the metering reporting requirements. This provides a direct update to the accounting system that is then checked and
verified by the customer field officers - the meter readers.
Updated usage information is particularly important for groundwater users, as the Department monitors the aquifers recovery from the
drought.
Check with WaterNSW river operators before reporting/updating monthly usage if you have an ongoing water order in place - supplementary
or other regulated water.
This month DPIEW confirmed that all stored regulated accounts are again at their maximum level, with excess water stored in Copeton Dam. This brings the years total allocation to 413% which is an odd way of explaining that accounts have been full and spilling since
December 2021, only those with airspace can receive the available water.
There is excess water available for sharing remaining in Copeton Dam when the dam is higher than 95%, the most recent resource assessment had 1,300ML surplus water available for next months allocation announcement (provided their is account airspace).
The GVIA provided the following submission to the Natural Resources Commission on their 10-year statutory review into the Unregulated Water Sharing Plans in the region.
We are now following up with the agencies key recommendations from the review including the WaterNSW licencing information and an urgent
review of trade restrictions.
Thank you to all our members who helped inform this submission and completed our survey.
We have been working hard towards solutions for existing multi-sensor meters to find a solution for telemetry, with a new trial underway
testing a LID to transmit data from multiple sensors. Currently there is no pathway for these transitioned meters that do not require administrative intervention by the Department and we have informed the agencies about that fact on your behalf.
The Department have informed us that solutions to enable the continued use of a groundwater bore for basic landholder rights - to water
gardens and household use within reasonable use guidelines, is being investigated. There has been no decision but they are exploring
options which will ensure consistency with other similar users, without the need of a meter. If you fall into this category, please
continue to hold tight until we have a formal solution for you. For members, who are using their work (bore, pump or gravity site) be
sure to check your metering requirements using the metering guidance tool.
This months resource assessment provided a further 8.6% allocation to general security accounts, with the ECA and environmental water
accounts at maximum level. Irrigation water availability is just below the 600GL maximum account limit.
The main summer irrigation season is drawing to a close and deliveries to the Gwydir Wetlands are also slowing down, which should see
releases at Copeton Dam ease off and the majority of this water carried over for future use.
Copeton Dam is holding steady at 93% capacity which means there is plenty of water to enjoy at the Holiday Park. At this level at the end of the irrigation season we anticipate, a few good years of economic activity from the stored water.
NSW DPIEW now regularly track groundwater extractions against the long-tern annual average extraction limits allowed in water sharing plans. This replaces the updates that we used to provide.
To report and status of groundwater regions is available from the Department's website.
Currently, extractions in the Lower Gwydir are well below limits although account water availability is high. The valley is deemed to have a medium risk to breaching limits but we see this as unlikely given the high surface water availability and low extraction to date. To
ensure the register has the most current usage information, please provide usage updates in iWas, where there is no telemetry automating your usage information.
NSW DPIEW are providing an update on groundwater levels in the Gwydir Valley on Tuesday, 15th March 2022 - 9:30- 11:30am. This
meeting is a face to face meeting in Moree at the Services Club.
Groundwater levels have generally fluctuated within acceptable levels of decline and recovery. However, in some localities, with
concentrated areas of pumping, groundwater levels are not able to fully recover before the following irrigation season starts. The
Department have more information on this and have provided a brief report accessed via the below link.
Join us for discussions on the Siphon-less tailwater backup design at Saunders Farming "Thuraggi Overflow" St George on Tuesday
8th March 2022. The field day is the second half of the CSD Cotton Management Field day.
The irrigation session will start at 10am with an update on the Water productivity benchmarking followed by an introduction to the system
from Craig Saunders. We will then have a panel session with Glenn Lyon, Lucas Wuersching, Andrew McKay, Grant Oswald and Malcolm
Gillies to discuss the design, the performance and some of the considerations for implementation.
We will be leaving Moree a 7am on Tuesday. Please contact Lou on 0427521498
Conditions are looking better in the Gwydir Valley for farmers and the environment. Natural river flows in 2020 and early 2021 started the process, with further rainfall, flows and flooding in 2021 and ongoing river flows in 2022. This has helped improved water
availability for farmers but has also encouraged the return of many water birds to the region this year, which is the most significant bird
breeding event since 2012. NSW and Commonwealth agencies have been monitoring the environmental condition of the region and have
provided updates following aerial surveys in December 2021 and January 2022 with five colonies of birds breeding and four of these
containing 1,000 to 2,000 nests each.
The bird breeding event, triggered from natural inflows is being supported by existing water sharing rules as well as water owned by
governments for environmental purposes. For more information on water for the environment visit our page
or the Commonwealth Environmental Water Office updates.
DPIEW have announced the latest water availability with a 40% allocation bringing this years total to 160.4%; general security accounts have a 150% limit and the environmental contingency allowance has 200%. All of these accounts are full, with 36,100 megalitres of
surplus unallocated in Copeton Dam.
The Dam remains steady at 96% with deliveries from some stream flows occurring, dam releases equalled inflows of 215,000
megalitres with around 64,000 megalitres ordered by licence holders during the time.
The GVIA are seeking member input into the 10-year review of the Water Sharing Plan for the Gwydir Unregulated Water Sources
2012, which includes all unregulated catchments in the one plan via an online survey.
The survey may take about 5-10mins depending on how much input or evidence you have of how the plan has worked or what needs improvement but
most questions are option based and not text based. For active users, we are also seeking data on your usage due to shortfalls in the
Department's register. All this will be collated in the Gwydir Valley Irrigators Association submission but you are also free to
provide your own.
The Natural Resources Commission is undertaking their audit and review of the Water Sharing Plan for the Gwydir Unregulated Water
Sources 2012, due every 10-years. Previous reviews by the NRC have been controversial as in the 5-year review of the Barwon Darling (here)
resulting in significant changes including, active management, increased commence to pump thresholds and new restrictions following drought
periods called resumption of flow rules.
The key areas as guided by the NRC are:
Environmental outcomes: examples of how the plan rules provide for environmental outcomes.
Social outcomes: examples of how has having ‘a plan’ allowed for improve social outcomes for you, your region and community.
Economic outcomes: examples of the value of a licence, clear rules and a trading market.
GVIA will be preparing a submission which is due on 6 February 2022. You can provide your own submission or to see more see the NRC
Review.
The NSW Government finally issued an exemption and outlined the process to apply for water users who do not have enough network connectivity (are in a black spot) to install a telemetry unit on their compliant water meter site. This exemption comes after raising this issue
since 2017 and NRAR issuing letter of advice to water users who had not been able to be fully compliant because of this issue.
There are three steps to apply for this exemption, which allow water users or duly qualified persons to identify whether a site is within network coverage and to apply using the standardised form. Please ensure this exemption is added as an update to your file in
the DQP portal so that all agencies have access.
We are continuing to work through the remaining outstanding issues that require an exemption.
WaterNSW have eased Copeton Dam releases and they remain steady since 14 December, with 1,500 megalitres per day being released.
Flood warnings have ceased for the Gwydir Valley in response, with the tail of the released water expected to pass through all of the effluent creeks and streams now that flow rates are within the scope of operations of the river infrastructure.
For information on river heights, visit WaterInsights.
As flood waters continue to move along our river systems now reaching western communities such as Mungindi, Collarenebri and Walgett and
spill operations for major storages continuing, including the recent addition of Menindee Lakes. This flooding is occurring as the NSW
Upper House report into Floodplain Harvesting[1] declared the historical practice is legal and should be measured and
licenced.
“The community rightly expect, is that whenever industry has access to water, it is only to our share, that the limits are policed and that
it is very transparent, even in floods when there is water everywhere” she said.
“We agree and that is why we’ve supported the licencing of Floodplain Harvesting - a long-standing, historical form of take that
happens when rivers and our floodplains are spilling, so that all forms of take are consistently managed in our valley” she said.
“Our position was supported by the Upper House Committee report which highlighted the need for measurement of storages and our rivers to
properly account for water use and licencing to ensure all limits in state and Federal legislation could be achieved and monitored”.
“These are all key elements of the reform which the majority of stakeholders agree, it is what the community expects and should be
implemented state-wide” she said.
The Gwydir Valley is currently experiencing a once in a decade event with Copeton Dam filling and spilling, along with most rivers and
streams flowing naturally.
Zara Lowien, Executive Officer of Gwydir Valley Irrigators Association who represents water users in the valley said whilst it is rare to
see Copeton Dam this full and spilling, this signifies the region is at the start of the boom, of our historical boom and bust cycle here in
the Gwydir Valley.
“Copeton Dam filling and our rivers constantly flowing, as they have for nearly a year now, is exactly what happens here when it finally
does rain” she said.
“These conditions are a far cry from those a few years ago, when environmental water and high security deliveries were the only sources of
water keeping parts of our rivers flowing, while others just didn’t flow at all” she said.
WaterNSW advised releases from Copeton Dam have decreased to 5,000ML/day. Copeton Dam remains steady at 99% capacity, with all
accounts at their maximum allocation.
The water releases take 4-5 days before reaching Pallamallawa.
The Gwydir River at Yarraman remains at a minor flood level, with additional inflows below Gravesend combining with spill releases from
Copeton Dam. Keep an eye on the BOM weather warnings for any flood warning updates.
From 1 December 2021, along with the last stage of new metering requirements for the Valley the NSW Government also kicks of new reporting
needs.
These are for water users that use their work for multiple purposes and they require you to report the split in your licensed water and Basic Landholder Rights use, to ensure water is not deducted off your license. Without reporting, all the water use
measured will be considered licensed. The rules also include self meter reads for those water users who do not have telemetry. The
rules are explained here https://www.industry.nsw.gov.au/water/metering-archive/new-reporting-rules
.
The rules are rather Draconian for water users that do not use water for irrigation but have a licensed attached to the work and therefore have the potential to irrigate, as you need to add up the water used each month and report it as BLR. We would encourage you to
write with your first report, complaining about these requirements as you are not an active irrigator but want to use the work for Basic
Landholder Rights. We did provide a submission at the time which was clearly ignored.
The attached approved form, which also has to be used is provided in the below link.
WaterNSW advised that releases from Copeton Dam were increased to 16,000 megalitres per day and again, to 20,000 megalitres per day to
account for recent rainfall upstream at Bundarra and with the current forecast.
These flows are now meeting with existing inflows and the the flows are larger and more sustained than the stream capacity of any
system, downstream (West) of Moree township being: the Lower Gwydir and Gingham, Mehi, Moomin and the Carole and Gil Gil systems.
Flooding in low lying areas or known chokes in these systems is likely as a result of these flows and that is before any further inflows. Flooding is already occurring along the Lower Gwydir, Gingham and Carole systems from earlier this week and local
inflows.
For a comparison of past floods, their heights and flow rates please visit our webpage History of Flooding, whcih was updated to reflect the
flood already this week.
For the first time since July 2012, Copeton Dam has reached 99% and WaterNSW have had to release water to make airspace for inflows, which
are the tail of the current event at Bundarra on the Gwydir River. This is only the fifth time since construction the dam has reached
this level.
Releases at this stage are 5,000 megalitres/day for the next few days, depending on the weather. WaterNSW will aim to maintain Copeton at
100%, no more or no less. These flows are well within the operational capacity of WaterNSW downstream near Moree.
All accounts associated with Copeton Dam are now full, with some unallocated water.
Releases are considered unregulated events and shared accordingly.
Follow and check in with river heights along the river via the BOM
river network here. WaterNSW
systems (WaterInsights - the preferred platform, WaterLive app and Realtime data) are overloaded and at times have delayed data or
cannot be displayed.
The Gwydir Valley is a distributary river system, which spreads our rivers and creeks across the Gwydir Floodplain which acts as a large
inland delta. Our rivers spill out naturally to these floodplains when they are full and spilling. Not every flood is the same, they
range in magnitude of height and duration and can occur from locally generated rain or from rainfall further upstream of the
catchment.
Recent flood warnings in December 2020 were predicted because of upstream rainfall and inflows. This was a short, sharp and small flow
which has created limited flooding. For example, the height at Pallamallawa was half of that experienced in 2011 and 2012 when the
entire north-west was in flood. This flow also didn't contain a lot of water but its peak flow rate at Pallamallawa of 33,000 ML/day was
still higher than the operating capacity of the regulator and cannot be managed. Rather this water flows naturally, unmanaged by
WaterNSW to the watercourse the lowest point of our inland delta and towards the Gwydir Wetlands.
DPIEW have updated the Metering Guidance Tool with a number of new questions to better guide you through the metering requirements. We recommend everyone step through this process to help them work out whether they need to call a Duly Qualified Person or not about needing a
meter.
Have your work approval and licence conditions on hand - you will need them to complete many of the questions. Remember to watch our videos via Vimeo https://vimeo.com/showcase/8853111 which step through how to find
these numbers and the information your need.
Copeton Dam is currently at 95% capacity with inflows still occurring from recent rainfall above the Dam - the dam storage levels can
be checked via WaterInsights.
Copeton only needs to get to 96% capacity before all licences have full allocations, meaning that at 100% capacity there is unallocated
water that sits until there is account space for it to be allocated.
However, for context, Copeton Dam has only reached 99% capacity for an extended period on four occasions since it was finished full
construction in 1976. Being 1978, in 1984, 1998 and most recently in 2012.
Please note, WaterNSW are not making airspace releases from Copeton Dam at this stage but this is occuring for Keepit Dam in the Namoi
Valley.
With minor flooding in the Gwydir Valley, WaterNSW has issued an update to the 9 November supplementary announcement, today the 12
November 2021, increasing access to 100% of allocation for those interested with updated pumping volumes provided.
Anyone who did not participate in the EOI earlier this week and would now like to participate must call WaterNSW to discuss, do not
just put in a water order you must email riveropsnorth@waternsw.com.au.
Reminder to place water orders via iWas or using the form and emailing water.orders@waternsw.com.au.
The BOM have revised the Flood Warning for the Gwydir Valley down to minor via their updates here.
Whilst the flood level has reduced. The flow rate in the Gwydir River is currently above the safe operating level of the
infrastructure at Tareelaroi Weir - this means that the gates are fully lifted, allowing the river to flow in its natural
direction which temporarily limits the ability for WaterNSW to direct flows down the Mehi River. That is why there has been a drop in
the Mehi River below the regulator late yesterday as the gates were required to be opened, the levels will rise with further water flows
and/or when WaterNSW can close some of the gates on the regulator.
River heights can be viewed via WaterInisghts
and selecting the Gwydir Regulated River, below find your location.
Contact WaterNSW if you have any further questions.
The Bureau of Meteorology have issues a flood warning for moderate to major flooding of the Gwydir and Mehi Rivers, for the weekend.
The rainfall activity is storm based and very difficult to predict but its important to keep watch of updates vis the SES
or the BOM websites.
For an assessment of past floods and their heights including the most recent events in December 2020 and March 2021, visit our webpage
History of Flooding. We will update this page with any new flood predictions if they occur.
In the interests of keep our staff and community safe at the busy and important time, our office in Moree remains temporarily closed given
the current COVID outbreak.
Members can call the office to arrange a teleconference or video conference meeting for any inquiries.
The NSW Government has announced an additional 4.8% increase in general security and environmental contingency accounts following
inflows into Copeton Dam. Copeton Dam is sitting at 86% capacity, and on average general security accounts have 135% in
accounts made up of 78.4% allocation provided this year plus carryover from previous years. General security accounts
have a maximum account limit of 150% this account limit is reached prior to Copeton Dam being at full capacity due to
unallocated water.
WaterNSW indicated during our recent Customer Meeting and River Operations meeting that any customer interested in supplementary water
was to contact the RiverOpsNorth@waternsw.com.au with ongoing unregulated flows downstream and limited
interest, they will not be making announcements until further notice.
Want to find our for yourself what the new NSW Metering Rules mean for you? The NSW Government is holding two virtual metering field
days
to help you understand the rules and what you need to do to be compliant.
You will be able to ask questions to a panel from the Department of Planning, Industry and Environment - Water group, WaterNSW and NRAR
staff. Fee free to ask these questions when registering.
Metering suppliers will also be presenting information on their products and available to answer your questions.
Session
1
Thursday 28 October
Session1: 12:30pm – 3.00pm
Session
2
Friday 29 October
Session1: 12:30pm – 3.00pm
Copeton Dam is a 86% percent capacity and General Security allocations including for the ECA and environmental water holders for this
year equal 73%, including carryover there is on average 126% in accounts. This is a stark contrast to conditions 18-months
ago for our region and others. For all NSW northern valleys storages are on average at 83% of capacity, the central valleys
have 91% and the southern valleys on 94%. There actually isn't a lot of room for more inflows.
The NSW Government has released excess licenses in some water sharing plan areas of NSW under a controlled allocation. These areas
include the fractured rock and GAB groundwater water source areas within our region if interested.
This process sets a minumum price per megalitre and a total volume of unit shares available for each listed water source and/or zone.
The majority of licenses are being released in coastal areas following the water sharing plan processes in those regions.
For members who have transitioned, multi-sensor MACE series 3 meters and cannot currently connect a suitable Local Intelligence Device
(telemetry) to this meter, please use this Ministerial Exemption request. Action this request with the Department to (1)
highlight the extent of the issue within the industry, (2) highlight the market failures in coming up with a solution (3)
executing all your effort to be compliant before the next round of metering compliance updates.
For businesses with multiple sites, please just provide a table of the key pieces of information being the work approval, the type of
meter, the number of sensors and the water sharing plan region.
Request this information is marked on the DQP portal for record keeping.
For members who do not have network coverage to connect their telemetry device to the DAS, please use this letter to request a
Ministerial Exemption. This must be formalised to DPIE, so they (1) have a clear indication of how many sites do not have
connectivity and (2) provides you a clear pathway post 1 December 2021 for compliance. Ensure this request is noted in the DQP
portal for record keeping.
For members who have had a Ministerial Request in with the DPIE and are yet to have a response, please inform the Minister that you
are awaiting a response and you need a direction in time to comply by 1 December 2021 and that you want the DQP Portal reflected with
this information.
For inactive water users who do not need to use their work for stock and domestic purposes, or water users without any infrastructure
installed you can mark your site inactive, to remove the requirement for metering obligations.
The form required to be lodged with WaterNSW is the Application to amend approval as inactive or active works. All inactive
sites are charged for their water use on a one-part tariff, even though you are not using the water.
To use this work for irrigation purposes, you will need to upgrade the site to meet all regulatory obligations like metering and also apply
to mark the site active again. In some cases this may requirement further assessment by WaterNSW and will incur fees.
NSW Government announced a clarification for water users who's works installed on the ground are less than the dimensions on their final
work approval, which will mean no amendment to the work approval is required in these circumstances. You will need to make an
administrative change to nominate your installed works as well as, what you are approved to have, allowing you in the future, to upgrade the
works to this approved capacity.
This is a great outcome for those water users who do not want to amend their works. For those that are happy to amend and adjust their
work approval, or are required to because the work is greater than their approval then continue to action this with WaterNSW.
WaterNSW will inform customers regarding this new process in the future.
To pump water allocation from work you must have a water access license (WAL) and have it attached to the work approval (work), which can
be a river pump or bore or well. However, if you are not an active user of water for irrigation (your license) you can remove the WAL
from the work, which in some circumstances will remove your requirement to need a meter as a non-active irrigation user without an
attached WAL - this is done using the form 'Application to subdivide, or to subdivide and make changes to a water access license -
section E4'.
This may suit sites where you use the work for stock and domestic purposes.
This means you still own both a license for water and a work but they are no longer linked.
You can continue to trade allocation off this license or sell it permanently if you choose.
You can reattach the WAL or another WAL, at a later date but this may incur an assessment and will incur fees and charges.
Understanding the changes to the NSW Metering Rules for non-urban water users can be a challenge and often the information is spread across
a number of Department and industry sources. We have found, the most central point to visit is WaterNSW Metering page https://www.waternsw.com.au/customer-service/water-licensing/metering#stay
It has the three steps you should take and all the links to the forms, the rules and the Departments Metering Guidance tool which we
encourage you to use. But importantly, its WaterNSW who manage the implementation and integration of the new rules on the ground, they
collect information from your Duly Qualified Persons and they administer the licensing database if you determine you need to make
amendments. In most cases it is WaterNSW you will need to speak with about metering as they are the customer liaison group,
plus they have a customer hotline 1300 662 077.
It is this website that features heavily in our video series on metering.
When water availability is higher than requirements for critical needs, the WMA Act 2000 and local water sharing rules provide a framework
to share that additional water between industry and the environment. Allocations are the physical water that maybe provided under
these sharing rules. The volume of allocation made available to an individual is determined by the total volume available to be
shared. This volume is divided by the number of shares that individual is licenced for.
Water is allocated based on these principles and is not allocated to a specific crop. Individuals make the decision on what crop to grow
with the allocation they receive.
There is a range of different irrigated crops grown in the Gwydir Valley, including cotton, horticulture and lucerne. We are home to the
largest pecan farm in the Southern Hemisphere and one of Australia's largest juicing orange orchards. Farmers have even tried hemp,
it is not currently a viable option, but may be in the future.
The NSW Water Minister today announced the NSW Government will exempt up to 500 small water users who take water under a domestic and
stock water access licence from non-urban metering rules, fixing an inconsistency in the NSW Government’s metering policy . The
announcement details are accessed below.
Zara Lowien from the GVIA said while welcomed for some water users, the decision to not extend this exemption to
groundwater sources such as the Lower Gwydir and the NSW Great Artesian Basin, will mean the majority of the region's stock and domestic
groundwater works are still required to be metered in the Gwydir Valley. This means many lifestyle blocks on the outskirts of towns
like Moree and dryland farms still need a water meter by 1 December 2021. This is over-reach by the metering reforms which should
focus on water being actively used for irrigation and as such, the exemptions should be extended to these other water sources.
We are also calling on the NSW Government to prioritise solutions for land owners who hold a water access licenses but are not active irrigators before the deadline of 1 December 2021. Again a large number of lifestyle blocks have small licenses that are inactive for
irrigation but that may be used for stock and domestic or basic landholder rights, who without intervention are required to have a meter by
December 2021.
The NSW Select Committee Inquiry into floodplain harvesting has had an explosive start to public hearings this week with hearings due to
wrap up on Friday, 24th September with the NSW Water Minister.
Zara Lowien, from the Gwydir Valley Irrigators Association said the next few days will be interesting as mainly stakeholders who are vocal
against the licencing proposal and irrigation in the northern valleys, present their cases.
“Since the drought we’ve seen floodplain harvesting which is water taken during a flood when rivers and streams are full and spilling
onto the floodplains, being criticised as the cause of all the problems with water management and the environment during the drought”.
“Everyone agrees current conditions are good – our rivers are flowing freely, with many storages including the Menindee Lakes full,
which is in stark contrast to the recent drought, when our rivers stopped flowing.”
“With many these mistruths blown out of the water and some stakeholders refusing to accept the real facts. Those destined to
undermine this process have fallen back on highly nuanced and often contradictory arguments on what is the long-term legal limit and
disputes on modelling results”.
“The analysis being used to support the claim that NSW is trying to update Cap without due process during this inquiry is not correct, nor
is the claim that Cap is being increased.”
“The analysis used to make the claims, isn’t even comparing apples with apples” said Mrs Lowien.
Food and fibre production in the northern Murray Darling Basin is worth more than $6 billion a year, according to a report by leading
Australian economic analysis company Macroplan. The report, commissioned by the Northern Valley Irrigators groups of which the Gwydir Valley contributed, sets out the value and flow-on benefits of investment in irrigated agriculture in the northern Basin.
“The report shows the economic and social value of irrigated and other agriculture in in the northern Basin,” explained Michael Drum, Executive Officer of Macquarie River Food and Fibre.
“Regional communities dominated by agriculture are circular economies, each sector relies on the other to be successful. Much of the
irrigated product both primary and secondary uses, goes to feeding a highly valuable livestock industry as well the food we eat and the
clothes we wear”.
Here is our third video in a NSW Metering Rules series - this is for active users, who want to work out if they need a meter and what
type of meter, but also who they contact.
This video goes through some examples, for groundwater users and surface water users using the NSW
Government Metering Guidance Tool.
It also then shows you how to find an approved expert to help provide you more specific advice, on what meter you may need and to install a
new one or check the one you have via the Irrigation Australia database
of Certified Meter Installers.
This video is available https://vimeo.com/610165753
Here is our second video in our NSW Metering Rules series - this is designed to help you make the administrative updates to your work
approval.
1. For users who are not active users for irrigation or do not have infrastructure, we cover the steps to mark your site inactive.
2. For users who want to just pump stock and domestic or basic landholder rights water, we explain how you can remove your WAL and change
the purpose of your work or just keep the works as they are but check if you need to install a meter.
3. For users who are active and there are differences between your on-farm infrastructure and the work approval, how to amend these.
You must not delay with undertaking these steps, there are price increases from 1 October 2021 for these applications.
This video is available via vimeo https://vimeo.com/609659644
Within the IPART pricing review details revealed the metering reform policy established by the NSW Government in 2019, is not meeting
its promised objectives.
“We’ve been watching the train-wreck that is the implementation and administration of the NSW metering policy and working on solutions, to
iron out barriers to compliance[1]” said Mrs Lowien.
“Detail in the attachments of the IPART review has highlighted the policy is also failing to meet expected efficiency or cost savings too”
she said.
“IPART has had to blend metering administration charges because it was going to be more expensive for customers to have telemetry ".
“The Government telemetry system is a complete farce, it’s not integrated properly within Government systems, water users cannot connect or
utilise the data easily and now, IPART have also exposed there’s no financial savings or benefits either” she said.
The Independent Pricing and Regulatory Tribunal (IPART) NSW handed down their new pricing structure for water charges in NSW to start from 1
October 2021 with no good news for farmers, struggling to recovery from the drought and the reform costs for metering already.
“The details within the determination confirms that Gwydir water users will see significant pricing change increases across the valley for
the next four years.”
“The only water user to see a reduction in overall charges are inland groundwater users, largely due to cost shifting between agencies.”
“High security and unregulated users are the hardest hit with 46% and 66% increase in some charges respectively. General security and
supplementary users are not free from increases, usage charges for them increase 34%[1]” she said.
“There are also significant increases in administration charges through WaterNSW which the GVIA warn anyone with a water approval to be
aware of the increase” said Mrs Lowien.
The recent resource assessment has increased general security allocation to 69.3% for the Gwydir Valley. Copeton Dam is at 82%
capacity and rising.
A stark contrast to this time last year, when Copeton Dam was at 16% capacity.
Total water available for general security irrgators in Copeton is 496,000ML with 213,000ML for held environmental water accounts,
including the ECA. This water is in the bank, so to speak and can be carried over if it is not needed this year. All high
security and other essential supplies are 100% and fully secured for two years.
In a scathing investigative report released today [HERE],
NSW Irrigators’ Council found the Department of Planning, Industry and Environment-Water (DPIE-Water) and WaterNSW had failed to execute
their administrative and technical responsibilities effectively.
“The industry supports this reform, which requires water users to upgrade their meters to a new, world-leading standard,” NSWIC CEO Claire
Miller said.
“But irrigators are fed up with being blamed for non-compliance by deadlines while DPIE-Water and WaterNSW get away with glossing over the
scale and impact of their poor planning.
GVIA helped inform the report and has been advocating to various Department's now for years, to address these barriers.
Executive Officer Zara Lowien said "We've been collating and communicating these issues directly to government for years, trying to work constructively, encourage action and implement the reform".
"But now, water users are receiving NRAR advisory letters becuase the government has failed to provide them an approved device to
install".
"Its not good enough to tell us the market will respond or don't worry, just "evidence" your effort."
"Water users are sick and tired of providing "evidence" on multiple occasions, to multiple NRAR employees that don't even seem to speak to each other or keep this "evidence".
"Water users just actually want to be compliant but the government agencies are letting them down".
"Enough is enough, its time they step up if they want this reform to work" she said.
Here is our first video in our series NSW Metering Rules. This video explains how knowing what your Work Approval is and that the NSW
metering rules prioritise new metering rules based on your work approval, irrespective of whether you use your water licence or not. It's
important that your works on the ground, match the details of your work approval and that all details on the work approval are correct.
The work approval is either a 90WA or 90CA number that WaterNSW or the Department of Planning, Industry and Environment - Water use when
they write to you and the details, if you don't have them can be searched on the NSW
Water Register
using either option such as the work approval, your licence numbers or property lot and dp. Watch this quick video to step through
this process.
The video is available via vimeo https://vimeo.com/596433444.
The NSW metering rules apply to all works and compliance will be assessed against your work approval - not what is in the ground and
whether you use it or not. If you do not actively use these works or do not have any infrastructure installed, you are not required to
have a meter.
Before a work will be tagged as inactive, YOU MUST demonstrate the work is not physically capable of taking water and REGISTER your work as
inactive. This is done through WaterNSW.
Registering your work inactive will ensure you avoid being non-compliant to these rules by the relevant due date; either 1 December 2020 for larger than 500mm sites or 1 December 2021 for all other sites. This applies to both surface and groundwater works.
The form required is vailable here https://www.waternsw.com.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0005/142628/Application-to-amend-approval-for-inactive-or-active-works.pdf
Advisory letters from NRAR have started arriving in email and letterboxes this week. We have written to NRAR and the Minister
regarding concerns with some of the correspondence we have reviewed, particularly the incorrect request to apply for s91i application to
self report (used for when your meter is not working or faulty), for meters that do not meet the regulations or have yet
to install telemetry.
However, we have seen letters from members who have MACE series 3, multi-sensor sites or sites without network connectivity, that despite
your best endeavors you are not compliant but NRAR are not taking action at this time. I am sure that's little comfort seeing they
later say "this letter do not preclude NRAR from taking further action in the future, if necessary". We encourage all
members who have received such a letter
to swiftly reply to NRAR confirming again, the barriers out of your control but also using the attached letter, write to the Minister
and formally request an exemption because there is no approved device available. Note the letter has an option (1) for members who have
multi sensor meters and option (2) for members with network connectivity issues. Remove the option you do not need and insert the
required fields in red. Request exemptions for each site/farm individually.
Submissions are now due into the NSW Upper House Select Committee Inquiry into Floodplain Harvesting.
Submissions are due by 13 August 2021 and we have provided templates for eligible floodplain harvesters, supplementary
water users and business and community members.
For more information visit the Committee
website
and to lodge your submission or visit our Members page for directions.
This guide has been developed for water users who are also ELIGIBLE FLOODPLAIN HARVESTERS and have participated in the Healthy Floodplains
Project.
This is about adding your voice to the NSW Upper House Inquiry into floodplain harvesting via a submission. We want you to
explain the long process, the detailed investigations and the confusion you had when the NSW Parliament rejected the licensing program that would licence, reduce and meter your floodplain take. That you do not see further delays as the solution and that licencing
still needs to happen.
We have put this together to help you prepare a submission. It is a guide only, it has a few key messages we hope you agree with
and convey in your own words. There is a sample submission, written as a letter which you can follow.
This gude has been developed for BUSINESS OWNERS and COMMUNITY MEMBERS who are effected by changes in irrigation water availability and who want to see a sustainable future for our industry and community, and that are willing to add their voice to the floodplain harvesting
licencing debate.
We ask that you encourage your suppliers and service industry businesses to consider providing a submission into the NSW Upper House Inquiry
into floodplain harvesting. The objective is for our community to be factored into Government decision making while demonstrating the impact of changes in water have to our irrigation dependant communities, how important floods are to drought recovery and the value that certainty for industry brings to the related businesses and our broader community.
The attached guide provides some suggested key messages to convey but also an example submission which is designed to be entered directly
into the online submission form.
This guide has been developed for those water users who hold SUPPLEMENTARY LICENCES and DO NOT FLOODPLAIN HARVEST.
This is about adding your specific view to the NSW Upper House Inquiry into floodplain harvesting debate and the decision to not license floodplain harvesting resulting in, the Minister determining a 50% reduction to all supplementary users for 2021-22. This guide could
also be used by other water users who are not floodplain harvesters and do not want their water rights to be diminished by others.
We ask that you take time to provide submission using this guide, which includes some key messages to convey in your own words. We
have also prepared an example submission which is designed to be either sent as a letter or pasted directly into the online submission option.
The realities of metering statistics are very different to the story being communicated by NRAR.
Valley based tracking of progress is available via NRAR and is presented on our new page below. Here we also capture the key barriers encountered by different users in these different categories. We thank everyone for their efforts to comply and despite some of the
media coverage, we encourage you to keep up the good work.
There will be significant challenges for Stage 2 - administratively, as well as in terms of resourcing with 7,601 istes in the northern
inland required to be compliant to the new rules by 1 December 2021. Please do not leave contacting a DQP if you are in this next
stage to the last minute.
WaterNSW would like to remind customers that supplementary water is available with unregulated inflows occuring downstream of Copeton
Dam.
These flows are providing water right along our river systems, the first 500ML/day are being delivered to the wetlands but any flows greater than that are being shared 50:50 between the environment and customers. WaterNSW indicated downstream tributary inflows greater than the minimum flow to the wetlands are being diverted away from this area where possible, unless ordered by customers. These rules and this operations, are enabling sharing of flows along our rivers and and beyond with more than 40,000ML flowing past Collarenbri from the Mehi alone this last month.
Copeton Dam has been rising since December 2020 since catchment wide rainfall began to fall with around 600GL of inflows over this time. This
rising trend is being followed right around NSW, with the current state-wide storage capacity at 74% (Copeton Dam just below the
state average at 63%).
However, percentages don't tell the whole story in the context of total water available around the state.
The northern basin has 71% availability equalling, 1,982GL of water, the central west is above the state average at 75% with 2,230GL of
water available and the souther basin also above the state average at 77% full has 8,876GL of water available. We set up a new page on our website to explore this here.