Irrigation Journal Spring 2020

Page 37

STATE ROUNDUP NEW FLOODPLAIN HARVESTING POLICY FOR NSW

In July, the New South Wales Government announced its Floodplain Harvesting Measurement Policy, which sets out a pathway for measuring, monitoring and licensing water captured during flood events in large on-farm storages. As a result, all floodplain harvested water directly used or collected and impounded in on-farm storages will be measured in New South Wales. The policy was announced against a background of discontent from floodplain graziers as well as southern Murray-Darling Basin irrigators, who believe that water harvesting in the north of the basin was severely affecting their allocations. The NSW Government estimates that water privately captured during flood events constitutes as much as 35 per cent of the overall surface take in the Northern Basin and said the policy is an attempt to manage flood water more equitably. According to the government, unmanaged floodplain harvesting has "had significant cumulative negative impacts on Aboriginal culture and traditional practices, non-irrigated agricultural production, downstream communities and provision of ecological services". All water storages fed by floodplain harvesting with a capacity of more than 1000 ML must be metered by 1 July next year, and smaller storages by 1 July 2022. This means that New South Wales is the first Australian state to measure and license privately impounded floodwaters that otherwise would have flowed downstream in the rivers of the Murray Darling system. The policy will initially apply to the five northern NSW Murray–Darling Basin valleys: Border Rivers, Gwydir, Namoi, Barwon–Darling and Macquarie valleys.

Above: New South has announced its policy on floodplain harvesting, which will affect New South Wales owners of 92 per cent of on-farm water storages in the Murray Darling Basin's Northern Basin. Photo. NSW Department of Planning, Industry and Environment.

The pressure is now on the other MDB states to follow suit. Farmers will pay for meters to be installed by a certified installer and telemetry meters will feed near real-time information directly to the Department of Planning, Industry and Environment - Water. Irrigation Australia will be responsible for providing training for and certifying meter installers.

Information For information about the policy go to New South Wales Department of Planning, Industry and Environment website. For information about certified meter installer training, go to Irrigation Australia website.

SPRING 2020

35


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Articles inside

Bookshelf

2min
page 50

New Products

7min
pages 51-54

ICID Insights

3min
page 49

Business Feature

2min
page 48

How water is used in the Murray-Darling Basin

4min
pages 46-47

Murray-Darling Basin water markets in need of major changes

4min
pages 44-45

Calculating Readily Available Water

5min
pages 40-41

Professional Development

3min
pages 42-43

State Roundup

1min
page 37

Contractors' Corner

4min
pages 38-39

Future-proofing Western Australia’s south-west

9min
pages 34-36

Around Industry

6min
pages 30-31

Waterway health and urban design

5min
pages 28-29

The Big Issue

4min
pages 32-33

Rainwater Harvesting Australia looking to consolidate achievements in 2020-21

2min
page 27

IAL News

11min
pages 23-26

Precision agriculture shows promise for vegetable production

5min
pages 20-21

Irrigation scheduling options: pros and cons

2min
page 22

Technology: Rural

4min
pages 10-11

SMART IRRIGATION FEATURE

3min
pages 18-19

Pumping system supplies farm’s water needs

4min
pages 14-17

Chairman's Message

2min
page 5

Research

5min
pages 12-13

Technology: Urban

2min
page 8

From the CEO

2min
pages 6-7

FEATURE ARTICLES

2min
page 9
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