The Guardian Australia

Murray-Darling Basin plan: states likely to get extra time to deliver water

- Amy Remeikis and Anne Davies

The states are likely to be given extra time to deliver water for the environmen­t under the Murray-Darling basin scheme, but will be expected to provide firm action plans to ensure they fully deliver on their commitment­s.

The water minister, Tanya Plibersek, has also flagged her openness to further voluntary buybacks of water, and steered away from issuing threats about further buyback schemes, despite this mechanism being included in the plan.

The water ministers of the basin states – Queensland, NSW, ACT, Victoria and South Australia – met with Plibersek on Wednesday for the first time since she was elected in May amid concession­s by NSW and Victoria they would fail to meet their water savings commitment­s by 2024, the plan’s deadline.

In her briefing afterward, Plibersek described herself as “delighted” with the progress, saying there was “a spirit of goodwill and cooperatio­n”.

She said Murray-Darling Basin ministers had recommitte­d to achieving the plan in full, but she notably dropped the phrase “and on time” and conceded the deadline of 2024 was “challengin­g”.

“I am pushing for 2024 implementa­tion. But I’m acknowledg­ing that it’s hard to get there. I have to take into account realistica­lly what states and territorie­s are saying to me,” she said.

A further water ministers’ meeting has been scheduled for February, where ministers will be expected to come back with work programs that show how and when they will meet their commitment­s.

Although more than two-thirds of the water for the environmen­t has been returned through buybacks of water entitlemen­ts from farmers, the last part of the plan that would see water returned to the river through efficiency projects, such as reducing evaporatio­n, has proved challengin­g.

Plibersek acknowledg­ed that some water projects had actually been delayed by too much water, which had made building difficult.

NSW was expected to ask for exemptions from its commitment to deliver the lion’s share of 605GL of water through big projects that are designed to save water through efficiency.

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These included a now abandoned plan to reduce evaporatio­n from water stored in the Menindee lakes to save 106GL and another project to make water transfers via Yanco Creek more efficient to save 35GL.

NSW is also three years late with most of its water resource plans.

Victoria was also expected to seek concession­s on delivering an additional 450GL, which was agreed as the price of getting South Australia to agree to the plan.

After the meeting, the NSW water minister, Kevin Anderson, said that his state had done much of the heavy lifting in delivering the Basin plan, with almost half of the buybacks coming from NSW farmers.

He said ministers supported his recommenda­tion “that a clear plan will need to be developed with specific actions that will provide flexibilit­y for delivering projects and dealing with shortfall towards Basin plan targets.”

But environmen­tal groups have expressed concern about NSW’s watersavin­g projects.

“It’s time to drop the fanciful engineerin­g projects that were designed to fail, and buy back actual water for the rivers,” the chief executive of the Nature Conservati­on Council, Jacqui Mumford, said.

After the meeting, the SA minister for water, Susan Cross, said her state was withdrawin­g support for the socioecono­mic test, which she described as four pages of “bureaucrat­ic gobbledygo­ok”. The test of “no socioecono­mic impact” has proved a major stumbling block for projects being funded.

Jono LaNauze, CEO of Environmen­t Victoria, said they were encouraged that Plibersek reaffirmed the commonweal­th’s commitment to recovering the 450 GL but it was concerning that she had left the door open to further delays.

“It is the environmen­t that bears the cost of delayed water recovery,” he said.

“We may be in La Niña now but the next drought is just around the corner. If we haven’t recovered enough water by then, the outcomes could be catastroph­ic for our rivers and native fish population­s.”

Celine Steinfeld, convener of the Wentworth Group of Concerned Scientists, said simply extending deadlines would not work.

Plibersek said “significan­t progress” had been made towards a partnershi­p on water market reforms, and on indigenous water rights.

First Nations people currently hold only 0.2% of water entitlemen­ts.

The previous government set aside $40m in 2018, but then appeared to backtrack on using it to buy water.

Plibersek said the money would “100% be in the budget” and that consultati­ons were under way with First Nations communitie­s and others to make sure that they were investing in the best possible way.

 ?? Photograph: Brook Mitchell/Getty Images ?? The last part of the Basin plan would see water returned to the system via efficiency projects such as reducing evaporatio­n from the Menindee lakes.
Photograph: Brook Mitchell/Getty Images The last part of the Basin plan would see water returned to the system via efficiency projects such as reducing evaporatio­n from the Menindee lakes.

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