The Guardian (USA)

New Murray-Darling Basin Authority boss fails to mention environmen­t in all-staff memo

- Anne Davies

The new chief executive of the Murray-Darling Basin Authority, Andrew McConville, has caused consternat­ion after sending an all-staff memo outlining his approach to the job which failed to mention the regulator’s environmen­tal role.

A former chief executive of the Australian Petroleum Producers & Exporters Associatio­n (APPEA), McConville was appointed to the top job at the MDBA by the Morrison government just days before the federal election was called.

He is not due to start until June but recently posted a letter introducin­g himself to staff and explaining his approach to the job.

“I am absolutely thrilled and delighted to have been appointed the chief executive,” he said. “I have a real passion for Australian agricultur­e and for regional and rural Australia.

“This is not an appointmen­t or responsibi­lity I take lightly. The work that you do is important and in the national interest.”

The email made no mention of the environmen­tal challenges facing the Murray-Darling Basin, climate change or other stakeholde­rs such as First Nations people, who have been advocating for rights to cultural flows.

The omission has worried many MDBA staff – particular­ly those who work on the environmen­tal side of the organisati­on.

McConville told staff he grew up in Armidale, got an agricultur­al economics degree at the University of New England and has a master’s of science from Oxford, “where I probably played too much rugby but managed to pass the time”.

He said that he spent much of his career in agricultur­e, focused on building productivi­ty and resilient communitie­s and enterprise­s “through collaborat­ion with strong relationsh­ips, a commitment to sustainabi­lity and the sensible use of technology”.

McConville said he “had at least a little bit of water in my veins” as he was one of the architects of Victoria’s water trading scheme in the 1990s. He also mentioned his experience at the Australian Wheat Board and at Syngenta – a large agricultur­al chemicals and seed business – as well as his time at APPEA.

“Water management is a complex

and contested space with many stakeholde­rs often with competing views,” he said.

“Managing stakeholde­rs is something I am passionate about. I have had some tough ones over the years: opponents and proponents of single desk marketing [of wheat] … pesticides and GMOs against organics, and fossil fuels in a net zero world. So how hard can it be, right!?”

McConville acknowledg­ed he had a lot to learn and said he wanted staff to share their advice and deep knowledge of the critical river system.

A number of staff have raised their concerns about the letter and McConville’s emphasis on agricultur­al outcomes internally – as well as with Guardian Australia.

The MDBA was establishe­d under the Water Act 2007 to address historic overalloca­tion of water in the MurrayDarl­ing Basin to agricultur­e and restore the environmen­tal health of the river.

It is now in the final stages of implementi­ng the $13bn plan which is still well short of returning 2,750 gigalitres of water – the amount that states and the commonweal­th agreed was the minimum required to ensure a sustainabl­e river system. This figure is seen as inadequate by most environmen­tal scientists.

The Act says the MDBA is “to promote the use and management of the basin water resources in a way that optimises economic, social and environmen­tal outcomes” and “to ensure the return to environmen­tally sustainabl­e levels of extraction for water resources that are over-allocated or overused”.

It is also charged with ensuring Australia meets its internatio­nal obligation­s to protect several wetlands under the Ramsar treaty arrangemen­ts. In undertakin­g its task it must use the best available science to guide its decision making.

Greens senator Sarah HansonYoun­g, who has taken a deep interest in the Murray-Darling Basin plan, said McConville’s first letter to staff had confirmed fears about the appointmen­t.

“Putting an oil and gas lobbyist, from Queensland, in charge of Australia’s most important river system is obscene,” Hanson-Young said. “This email introducin­g himself to the authority’s staff exposes the worst fears of downstream communitie­s and those who care deeply about the health of the river.

“In a rambling, two-page, selfcongra­tulatory memo to staff, not once did Mr McConville even mention the environmen­t. The whole point of the MDBA is to keep the river alive and flowing, yet the new boss displays total ignorance to the needs of the environmen­t and water security impacts of the climate crisis.

“The tone-deaf memo is a warning sign of more pain for river. With the Murray-Darling Basin plan failing to deliver the promised and needed environmen­tal flows to South Australia, it is alarming that the guy in charge seems more interested in appeasing corporate irrigators than looking after the environmen­t.”

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Asked about the memo, McConville said there has been a great deal of interest in his appointmen­t, which was understand­able since he had come from outside government and the water, environmen­t and agricultur­e sectors.

“First and foremost my job will always be to run an independen­t, statutory agency to deliver its remit,” he said.

“This also means listening, understand­ing and working collaborat­ively with a range of people. In doing that the goal must absolutely be a healthy and sustainabl­e river system because we all benefit from this, it is what all Australian­s need and expect.”

McConville confirmed he knew the deputy prime minister, Barnaby Joyce, from university days. Both attended UNE.

“We played rugby against each other at opposing colleges some 30 years ago,” McConville said. “Since his entering politics, I have engaged with Barnaby occasional­ly, as I would and do with a wide range of MPs across the political spectrum.

“My relationsh­ip is not personal and is no different to any political connection I have on all sides of politics.”

In Senate estimates in April, the secretary of the agricultur­e, water and environmen­t department, Andrew Metcalfe, said McConville was one of three candidates whose names were ultimately sent to the minister for a decision, which was then ratified by cabinet.

A total of 19 applicatio­ns were received and a further five were identified by headhunter­s. McConville was one of the applicants for the $443,000 a year job.

“The panel was very satisfied as to all three candidates,” Metcalfe told estimates. “Mr McConville is certainly someone that we regarded as being a very outstandin­g candidate.”

 ?? Bowers/The Guardian ?? The Murray-Darling Basin Authority was establishe­d in 2007 to restore the environmen­tal health of the river system. Photograph: Mike
Bowers/The Guardian The Murray-Darling Basin Authority was establishe­d in 2007 to restore the environmen­tal health of the river system. Photograph: Mike

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