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Australia: Best PracticesAustralia: Best Practices
Canberra, Goulburn, Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Perth
SE and SW are agricultural areas Population very urbanized: most in large
cities near coast >~1 million or others in towns <~10,000 (Few cities of ~100,000)
Australia: waterAustralia: water World’s driest inhabited continent
Droughts common: world’s largest per capita constructed water storage
Droughts (& floods) becoming more severe, esp. in SE & SW corners. Global warming?
Yet use ~280L/c/d, 3rd after US/Canada, almost double Netherlands
Australia: gov’tAustralia: gov’t Federal nation like Canada
Wealthy elderly paternal national gov’t, impoverished child states
Not nerdy somewhat well-off older brother tolerated when his money or brains are useful, not always well loved otherwise
Cities quite weak (Brisbane exception)
GoulburnGoulburn
Inland city of 22,000 1 hour NE of Canberra, 2 hrs SW of Sydney Big Merino: agricultural area Industries: abbatoir, wool-scouring Maximum security prison
Pejar Dam April 2004Pejar Dam April 2004 Goulburn’s principal water supplyGoulburn’s principal water supply
Lake PejarLake Pejar Worst drought in
100 years 5 yrs ago, 10m
deep, 1000 ML water
May 20 2005: 8% capacity, possibly gone by end of year
Pejar May 2005Pejar May 2005
What to do? Close or move
town? Move water by
truck or rail? Move 300 max.
security prisoners? Close industries?
What they did: emergencyWhat they did: emergency Closed swimming pools: kids shuttled to
Canberra by bus Closed sports grounds: injuries on hard ground Townfolk: 100 second shower limit Prison: 70 inmates shower in an hour May: people asked to use <150L/day (=15 minute
shower) June: 120 L/day (washing machine full) Per capita use was <1/2 that 3 yrs ago Biggest businesses reduced water use by 1/3
despite concerns re meeting cleanliness standards for export
What they did not doWhat they did not do
Close industries - town would die
Use truck/railcar to bring water - has worked in small communities of a few hundred, not at this scale 4 million L/week
Effect of drought on farmsEffect of drought on farms
Some compensation from Canberra
Some farmers sold livestock
Concerned about paying back money borrowed to continue
What they did: responseWhat they did: responseBores dug for C$1.5 million, ->5
million L/day, enough for 6 monthsPlanned a C$3 million pipeline to
nearby riverConsidering drinking re-treated
sewage treatment plant effluent. Mayor: “Someone’s got to do it.” Could be built in 5 yrs for C$30 million
Some roots of the problemSome roots of the problem
High water use/capita in an uncertain climate. Examples:
No requirements for water-efficient appliances (washing machines, dual flush toilets)
No requirement for swimming pool covers to reduce evaporation
SydneySydney Largest city in Australia Sydney Harbour:
picturesque, also a unit of volume in Australia:
1 Sydney Harbour =0.5 million ML
70% use is household, 360L/c/d
Recycles 14 billion L/yr treated wastewater
Warragamba DamWarragamba Dam Principal source
of Sydney’s water
Reservoir at Warragamba Reservoir at Warragamba June 2005June 2005
June: <40% full (~1 year’s supply)
Goulburn is in same catchment, so Goulburn extracting river water could affect Sydney
Desalination plant?
Water Corporation of Water Corporation of Western AustraliaWestern Australia
Provide urban water services for entire state (~40% of area of country)
Statewide pricing Building 1
desalination plant for C$300 million, considering a 2nd
(Considered a 2500km canal also)
First urban end-use study
Checking dataChecking data Data not always
perfect
Wimmera-Mallee PipelineWimmera-Mallee Pipeline(Victoria)(Victoria) Supplies 5500
farms/>40 towns Constructing about
8,000km to replace open earthen channel system losing 85% of water to evaporation & seepage
25% paid by users, Canberra, Victoria, Water Authority
Savings est.: 100,000 ML/yr
MelbourneMelbourne Single water services
provider split up into a bulk supplier/wastewater treatment agency, 3 competing? retailers/wastewater collectors late 1990’s
50 year water supply plan in 2000/01?
Planning for the Future of Planning for the Future of our Water Resourcesour Water Resources
Vision for Melbourne Predicted to grow significantly – 50 yrs No new dams in next 50 yrs Internationally recognised watersmart city Water demand reduction is most strongly
preferred, supported option
Needed to assess demand Needed to assess demand reduction options reduction options Need to understand Need to understand existing water demands existing water demands Analysis of End Uses: a Analysis of End Uses: a preferred tool preferred tool
End-use AnalysisEnd-use AnalysisNeeds information on Total water use in different subclasses of
customers Water use associated with various existing
technologies used by people Knowledge of numbers (stock) of each type of
each existing technology in each subclass Projections of changes/phasing in of new
technologies Water use associated with future technologies
Purpose: End-use modelPurpose: End-use model
Allows modelling changes of stocks of technologies
Facilitates demand management programs
Found no major new Found no major new supplies neededsupplies needed New subdivisions to be much more
water-efficient Best available technology Landscape with native species: water-sensitive
urban design Reuse of water within subdivision (cascading
quality) Demand management of existing
customers to provide the small amounts of needed water
BrisbaneBrisbane Considering full
cost water pricing including externalities
4X plant
National Water Conservation National Water Conservation Rating and Labelling SchemeRating and Labelling Scheme
Started with up to 3 A’s
Standards revised to include more efficient technology
Forced to move to 5 A’s
EndEnd