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 Diversion of Darling River flows into Menindee Lakes, August 2010

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 Darling River below Menindee, August 2010

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Confluence of the Murray and Darling Rivers, August 2002

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Confluence of the Murray and Darling Rivers, August 2010

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Earthworks of suspected surface water diversion, Darling catchment

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Intake pumps, River Murray

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Darling River Trilby Station. Photo by Mark Ingram Photography

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The Darling River Louth. Photo by Mark Ingram Photography

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Diversion of the Culgoa River, Cubbie Station. Photo by Google Earth

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Lake Albert, October 2008

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Lake Albert, October 2008

Frontpage Slideshow (version 2.0.0) - Copyright © 2006-2008 by JoomlaWorks
Productivity Commission draft report: Current infrastructure projects no solution to water crisis PDF Print E-mail

The Findings and Recommendations section of the draft report by the Productivity Commission, Market Mechanisms for Recovering Water, details the successes and failures of the water recovery plan for the Murray-Darling.  It is highly critical of the expenditure of billions of taxpayers dollars by the Basin States on huge and unnecessary infrastructure projects. 

The States continue to ignore the calls from their electorates to abandon these white elephant constructions; perhaps they will take heed of the opinion of the Commonwealth Government's independent research and advisory body on issues affecting the welfare of Australians, particularly the following:

DRAFT FINDING 6.4

Funding infrastructure upgrades is generally not a cost-effective way for governments to recover water for the environment. It is also unlikely to be an effective or efficient means of sustaining irrigation communities.

DRAFT RECOMMENDATION 6.2

Rigorous approval processes should be applied to all projects under the Sustainable Rural Water Use and Infrastructure program. In particular, projects should generally only be approved where the cost per megalitre for water entitlements recovered is similar to the market price. Premiums above this price should only be paid in exceptional circumstances. 

Commissioner, Neil Byron, is on record as stating, “There are cases where governments have paid not only 20 or 30 per cent more, but sometimes three or four times more than the market price to recover water through very large, complicated infrastructure projects”.

 
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Advocating environmentally responsible use of Australia's water

Fair Water Use is an independent and politically non-aligned lobby group,

organised and supported by ordinary Australians who share concerns about Australia's water future

- especially that of the Murray-Darling Basin