Mercury (Hobart)

Lake water systems safe

TasWater says fine to drink despite metal contaminat­ion data

- EMILY BAKER State Political Reporter

TASWATER says it is safe to drink water from systems linked to the Tasmanian lakes this week revealed to have been badly contaminat­ed by historic West Coast mining activities.

The authority yesterday reviewed its data from systems and catchments associated with lakes found by an Australian National University study to have been dangerousl­y contaminat­ed by metals.

The study looked at lakes — such as Dove Lake at Cradle Mountain — within and near the Tasmanian World Heritage Area. Some exceeded the highest allowable levels within Australian and New Zealand sediment guidelines and were described as among the worst metal contaminat­ion readings in the world.

“TasWater has reviewed our data for the systems and catchments that include these lakes and we do not have concerns for drinking water quality as a result of claimed contaminat­ion,” a TasWater spokesman said yesterday.

“Even if sediments found their way into raw water sour- ces used by TasWater, our treatment processes and water quality management regimes would ensure no contaminan­ts would enter the water supply.”

Science communicat­or Alexandra de Blas, whose research on pollution in Macquarie Harbour was quoted in the ANU study, said the research should be taken seriously.

“The heavy metals aren’t just locked up in the sediments, there is movement between the sediments, the water and living organisms,” Ms de Blas said. “There needs to be follow-up research to examine whether these heavy metals are affecting how aquatic animals reproduce and survive and we also need to know if the fish in Tasmania’s internatio­nally renowned lake systems are contaminat­ed.”

Premier and Parks and Tourism Minister Will Hodgman yesterday said the ANU study revealed a “significan­t environmen­tal issue”.

“We need to take advice as to those responsibi­lities and where they lie, but I think more broadly there’s a shared, collective responsibi­lity for government­s but also for those mining companies, now and indeed perhaps those past, to be part of remediatio­n,” Mr Hodgman said.

Tasmanian Greens senator Nick McKim said it was incumbent on both levels of government and mining companies to take action.

The ANU study was published in the peer-reviewed Science of the Total Environmen­t.

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