John C.
Radcliffe
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, Private Bag 2, Glen Osmond, South Australia 5064, Australia. E-mail: john.radcliffe@csiro.au; Tel: +61 (0)883038580
First published on 23rd April 2015
Australia is a dry continent. Its governments initiated a visionary process of water reform in 1994, when water resource management and water supply services began to be progressively separated. The subsequent Intergovernmental Agreement on the National Water Initiative (2004) separated entitlements for water from ownership of land, allowing water to be traded. The agreement provided a nationwide framework for management of water for the environment, agriculture and urban use, including water recycling. Also included was a commitment to full cost recovery. From about 2000, Australia had entered a prolonged period of what came to be known as the “millennium drought”. This encouraged the urgent adoption of alternative water sources and the development of recycled potable water guidelines. However, rains returned to eastern Australia from 2008 and in January 2011, much of it was flooded. After their proving phases were completed, newly-built eastern states desalination plants were put on standby and the Brisbane Advanced Water Treatment Plants were closed without ever having been used for their principal purpose of potable supply. By contrast, Western Australia has remained dry, thought to be early evidence of global warming, with its desalination plants supporting Perth's base water supply. An indirect potable water recycling plant using managed aquifer recharge is being built with wide community acceptance. Nationally, following much of the major water infrastructural investment now seeing little use, attention has turned to economic regulation, the evaluation of those capital investments and their impact on prices and charges to water consumers. It has been argued that insufficient attention was paid earlier to the continuing role, economics, on-going technological resilience and in some cases public acceptance of the water recycling and desalination after the drought abated. After the end of the drought in eastern Australia, national policy priorities have turned elsewhere. Intergovernmental and statutory institutional structures have been abolished. Water policy complacency is evident and reform impetus is at risk of being lost. Water research funds are reducing. Australia must ensure that a long term policy reform commitment is maintained while dealing with immediate, short term issues. Policy-makers and the community must ensure that recycled water and desalination are seen as valuable resources within the framework of the entire hydrological cycle where economically viable – all water is ultimately recycled.
Water impactThe introduction of Australian environmental protection agencies with effluent disposal standards followed by the millennium drought led to coordinated national water reforms in the 1990s and the 2004 Intergovernmental Agreement on the National Water Initiative. Investments followed in potable and non-potable water recycling. After 2010 eastern Australian floods, four new desalination plants have been placed on standby and three advanced water treatment plants for indirect potable use closed, seeing little significant use. Western Australian desalination and indirect potable water development continues, but national policy attention has turned elsewhere. The Ministerial Council on Environment and Water has been abolished and the National Water Commission closed, leading to loss of coordinated national policy impetus for water reform and likely reduced uptake. |
A number of major initiatives were implemented in the 1990s, including the National Water Quality Management Strategy Guidelines, the NSW Guidelines for Urban and Residential Use of Reclaimed Water, the planning for dual reticulation of both drinking water and recycled water in the new Rouse Hill (Sydney) subdivision, initiation of an integrated approach to sewage effluent and stormwater management at the site chosen for Sydney's 2000 Olympic Games, the upgrading and provision of recycled water from Adelaide's Bolivar Waste Water Treatment Plant (WWTP) for vegetable growing on the Northern Adelaide Plains and the building of a microfiltration – reverse osmosis water recycling plant at Luggage Point in Brisbane to produce very high quality water for industrial use. The primary driver for initiating these projects was environmental protection.1
From around 2000, the east coast of Australia began to dry out. Most of Australia's capital cities except Hobart began to find their water resources progressively depleting as a result of drought, a condition which continued across the country for most of the decade, and came to be known as the “millennium drought”. The demand management policies and water restrictions introduced resulted in the Australian community becoming increasingly concerned that they would run out of water. Urban water issues were front and centre daily in the newspapers and discussed regularly on talk back radio.3
Further water reforms followed in 2004–2006 when the Commonwealth and the States and Territories progressively signed a 108 clause Intergovernmental Agreement on the National Water Initiative (NWI). The agreement4 encompassed clauses on water entitlements, water markets and trading, water pricing, management of environmental water, water accounting, urban water, community partnerships and adjustment, and knowledge and skills. It had objectives of ensuring healthy, safe and reliable water supplies; increased domestic and commercial water use efficiency; facilitating water trading between and within the urban and rural sectors; encouraging innovation in water supply sourcing, treatment, storage and discharge; and achieving improved pricing for metropolitan water. The National Water Commission (NWC) was established in March 2005, initially attached to the Office of the Prime Minister, though later transferred to the portfolio of the Minister responsible for water resources. The NWC was an independent statutory body created to drive the national reform agenda and assist with the effective implementation of the NWI. The Commission undertook two-yearly evaluations of progress.
Meanwhile, the city of Toowoomba in Queensland had generated a proposal for an indirect potable recycled water supply.15 But to secure Commonwealth government co-funding, a community plebiscite of the proposal was required and subsequently lost. A review identified biases in information processing, with supporters and opponents selectively attending to information aligned with their own values.16 Despite that referendum outcome, the Queensland government cancelled a proposed Brisbane plebiscite on potable recycling for March 2007 and proceeded to directly develop Advanced Water Recycling Plants adjacent to Waste Water Treatment Plants at Bundamba, Luggage Point and Gibson Island. The scheme, known as the Western Corridor Scheme, was based on the manufacture (as it was described) of purified recycled water by microfiltration, reverse osmosis and advanced oxidation. The recycled water was to be pumped to the Wivenhoe Dam. Portion of the flow was to be used at two power stations which were then using 10% of Brisbane's daily drinking water consumption. Brisbane's water resources were linked together with the Gold Coast desalination plant to form a newly constructed water grid. The whole project was completed urgently within 2 years.17
The resultant alternative urban water sources are summarised in Table 1.
City/location/(state) | Capacity (GL per annum) | % Current demand | Contractor | Delivery method | Owner | Contract (years) | Status (2014) | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Desalination | ||||||||||||||
Sydney-Kurnell (NSW) | 90 | 15 | Veolia Water (Veolia & John Holland Industries) | Design, build, operate for Sydney water, then lease | Long term lease to Sydney Desalination Plant Pty Ltd | 50 | Standby | |||||||
Melbourne-Wonthaggi (Vic) | 150 | 33 | Aquasure (Dégremont, Thiess, Macquarie Capital) | Build, own, operate under public private partnership | Private owner – Aquasure | 30 | Standby | |||||||
Gold Coast/Brisbane-Tugun (Q) | 45 | 18 | WaterSecure [now Seqwater] (John Holland, Veolia Water, SKM, Cardno) | Alliance – design, build, operate | Seqwater | 10 | Standby | |||||||
Adelaide-Port Stanvac (SA) | 100 | Up to 50% | Adelaide Aqua (Acciona Agua, United Utilities, McConnell Dowell, Abigroup) | Alliance – design, build, operate, maintain | SA government | 20 | Standby (10% production in 2015 for optimising study) | |||||||
Perth-Kwinana (WA) | 45 | 17–25 | Dégremont (Multiplex-Dégremont) | Competitive alliances | Water corporation | 25 | Full capacity | |||||||
Perth-Southern Binningup (WA) | 100 | 18–25 | Southern Sea Water Alliance (Technicas Reunidas, Valoriza Agua, Lucas, Worley Parson, Water Corp.) | Design, construction and operation | Water corporation | 25 | 50–80 GL per annum, 100 GL per annum in drought | |||||||
Advanced water treatment – potable recycling (excluding pipelines) | ||||||||||||||
Brisbane-Bundamba (Q) | 24 | 30 | Thiess, Black & Veatch | Alliances – three treatment plant alliances, plus two other transfer system (pipelines) alliances | Queensland manufactured water authority (WaterSecure) to the Queensland bulk water supply Authority (Seqwater from 1 July 2011) | 10 | Closed | |||||||
Brisbane-Gibson Island (Q) | 36 | MWH, Worley Parsons, Baulderstone Hornibrook, United Group Infrastructure | 10 | Closed | ||||||||||
Brisbane-Luggage Point (Q) | 24 | CH2MHill, Lang O'Rourke. Connell Wagner, Hatch | 10 | Closed |
Melbourne took a different approach for one of its projects when in 2006, it initiated an upgrade of the Melbourne Water Eastern Sewage Plant which handles 40% of Melbourne's waste water. There was a need for environmental improvement surrounding the treated effluent discharge point at Boags Rocks, but also to increase the use of high quality recycled water for non-potable purposes. A pilot plant was built to test alternative treatment trains, including membrane separation and media filtration.20 The upgrade chosen for the Advanced Tertiary Treatment Plant, completed in 2012, treats secondary effluent uses a pre-ozone – biological media filtration – post-ozone – UV – chlorine process train. While the treatment includes filtration, this does not contribute to the microbial treatment objectives at this stage, the required log reduction values (LRVs) being achieved through inactivation by the post-ozone, UV and chlorine treatment.21
Independently of the development of these major urban schemes, by 2008, “fit-for-purpose” recycled water in various forms had progressively evolved across in Australia for use in third pipe reticulation systems to new housing developments in Adelaide, Melbourne Sydney and Brisbane. Recycled water was also being adopted for urban amenities, industries, environmental flow substitution, and to achieve discharge standards to receiving waters now required of wastewater treatment plants. Some proposals included well conducted community consultations, a prime example being the developing 7000 hectare Pimpama-Coomera area, served by Gold Coast Water, a Directorate of the Gold Coast City Council. All houses built after August 2005 were to have Class A+ recycled water in third pipe systems. De facto indirect potable recycling from the discharges of wastewater treatment plants into receiving waters which downstream were used as a source for water treatment plants was also more widely recognised, albeit discreetly.22 By 2009–2010, urban water utilities were supplying a total of 245 GL of recycled water per annum, an increase of 34% since 2005–2006.23 The Australian Bureau of Meteorology has established a public database of Climate Resilient Water Sources (http://www.bom.gov.au/water/crews) which provides for viewing, downloading and contributing data on Australia's alternative water sources including recycled and desalinated water. It currently records 165 water recycling plants with a total capacity of 467 GL and a 2013 production of 151 GL, and 78 desalination plants with a capacity of 351 GL and a production of 37 GL in 2013.
The period from late November 2010 to mid-January 2011 was extremely wet through much of eastern Australia. There was widespread flooding on many rivers, culminating in severe flooding (including river and flash flooding) in Brisbane and nearby areas of south-east Queensland, northern New South Wales, large parts of northern and western Victoria and northern Tasmania. The flooding, in terms of extent, impact and severity, was amongst the most significant in Australia's recorded history – many catchments were already wet before the flooding rains.25 Brisbane's Wivenhoe dam, which also served as a flood attenuation dam, filled to 200% of its maximum water storage capacity, and water had to be released from it at relatively high rates to protect the structure, resulting in exacerbation of flooding in large areas of low lying Brisbane. Attention turned from water resource deficits to flood mitigation.
All of the east coast desalination plants and advanced water recycling plants were virtually taken out of service once their validation and contract proving stages were completed, although the Gold Coast Tugan plant was fleetingly reactivated when Cyclone Oswald in 2013 dumped huge rainfalls on the Wivenhoe catchment, the subsequent massive silt load causing major problems for Brisbane's Mount Crosby water treatment plant. From the perspective of governments, attention turned to economics, particularly the debt loads that these plants had generated, and the impact of perceptions and increased costs and prices on water consumers. Having signed the Intergovernmental Agreement on the National Water Initiative, governments had committed themselves to full cost recovery, including debt servicing. This has required the development of price paths to accommodate water customers. For example, in 2008, the Queensland government decided to phase in bulk water price increases to cover the costs associated with the recently-completed investment in the bulk water supply system for desalination, advanced water recycling and pipeline infrastructure by implementing a ‘price path’ that provides for annual price increases over a 10 year period, during which water prices will not recover the full costs of supplying bulk water. This means selling bulk water at a loss, being funded by further debt.27 Excluding capital costs, the actual operating cost of producing manufactured water from the Gold Coast desalination plant in 2011–2012 was $959 per ML, from the Advanced Water Treatment plants of the Western Corridor scheme $834 per ML, while that harvested from the catchment base, which constituted 96% of Brisbane's water, cost $67 per ML.28 One assumes, however, that the cost of maintaining the catchment environment or income foregone from alternative catchment uses was not encompassed.
One alternative approach is to purchase water from agricultural users for urban supply. A small amount of water for agricultural use can represent a relatively large amount of water for urban users. The South Australian Water Corporation did so in 2009 and 2010. In Victoria, scope was provided for a substantial transfer of irrigation water with the Sugarloaf Pipeline, completed in 2010 for $750 million. It connects the Goulburn River to Sugarloaf Reservoir and was expected to supply 75 GL of water to Melbourne each year when used. However, following considerable disquiet expressed by irrigators in the form of a “plug the pipe” campaign, the Victorian Government imposed a policy ban, determining that the pipeline is not to be used except in the case of critical human need for water in metropolitan Melbourne.29
The Australian National Audit Office concluded that when considered against Commonwealth program guidelines, neither of the two grants for the Adelaide Desalination Plant demonstrably satisfied the program's merit criteria.30 There were considerable differences in the capital costs and operating costs between each of the desalination plants and with the Western Corridor Advanced Water Treatment plants. When the plants are not in use, the costs of debt servicing and care and maintenance may still exceed half the operating costs at full production.31 Regulated prices have been established for the privately leased Sydney desalination plant including for various periods of non-production and for start-up costs after a period of closure.32 The technologies required to maintain membrane plants when they are not being used are still unclear. Submissions to a Queensland Parliamentary inquiry (now lapsed) suggested that the Western Corridor scheme would be much more economically effective if recycled water were piped directly as potable water to the Mount Crosby Water Treatment Plant rather than being pumped a considerable distance as a form of indirect potable recycling to the Wivenhoe Dam.33
In 2011, Sydney Water confirmed that it had no intention of building any further recycled water plants to serve domestic third pipe systems because they were too costly.34 However, the City of Sydney has been pursuing recycled waste water and stormwater opportunities in new developments by encouraging private sector decentralised systems for non-drinking purposes. A key legislative instrument guiding arrangements for water and sewerage services in Sydney is the Water Industry Competition Act 2006 (NSW) which aims to encourage competition in water supply and sewage services in NSW and to facilitate the development of infrastructure supporting production and reticulation of recycled water.35
Declaring that the cost of the scheme outweighs the value to the community, the Gold Coast Council is staging the closure by December 2016 of the Pimpama Coomera Class A+ recycled water scheme which provides recycled water to 5650 houses approved and built since August 2005.36
Many of the alternative water source plants initiated in Australia during the drought appear to have been based on decisions made mostly through central planning processes rather than markets, and by assuming continuous operation.
The National Centre of Excellence in Desalination, comprising CSIRO and 13 participating universities, has come to the end of its initial Commonwealth funding. It has been researching pre-treatment, reverse osmosis desalting, novel desalting, concentrate management, and social, economic and environmental issues from a base in the Rockingham campus of Murdoch University in Western Australia.
The Goyder Institute for Water Research is a partnership between the South Australian Government through the Department of Environment, Water and Natural Resources, CSIRO, Flinders University, the University of Adelaide and the University of South Australia. Establishing in July 2010 with the development of a $50 million, 5 year strategic research plan covering four key themes of environmental water, water for industry, urban water and climate change, its initial term is drawing to a close. Among many other reports it has issued, the Goyder Institute has released reports on ‘Managed Aquifer Recharge and Urban Stormwater Use Options: Summary of Research Findings; Satellite Sites’ ‘Stormwater Quality Monitoring and Treatment Requirements for Potable Supplies’ and ‘Investigation of stormwater impact on water quality and distribution infrastructure’.40
The National Centre for Groundwater Research and Training (NCGRT) was established in 2009 by the Australian Government as a Centre of Excellence co-funded for five years by the Australian Research Council and the National Water Commission until 2014. Based at Flinders University, with 12 partner universities and more than 10 industry partners, it now has interim base funding from Flinders University and a project grant from the Murray Darling Basin Authority. Research had been grouped into five major research programs which contributed to the potential for recycled water to be used in conjunction with managed aquifer recharge.41
The Australian Water Recycling Centre of Excellence (AWRCoE), funded until 2015, has been undertaking projects encompassing the social, economic and environmental value of water recycling by developing and demonstrating new technologies; establishing a National Validation Framework for water recycling to simplify future approval processes; developing programs and products that will facilitate reclaimed water being viewed as an acceptable ‘alternative water’ for augmenting drinking water supplies; and establishing a national knowledge, training and education program for water recycling. Being aware of the 2012 US National Research Council report on Water Reuse,42 AWRCoE commissioned an independent report from the Australian Academy of Technological Sciences and Engineering (ATSE) on the benefits and costs of supplying recycled water directly to the distribution system. The report concluded that advanced water treatment plants are complex but direct potable recycling (DPR) is technically feasible and can safely supply drinking water directly into the water distribution system, noting that current Australian regulatory arrangements can already accommodate soundly designed and operated DPR systems.43 Increasingly, AWRCoE research has been coordinated with the United States WateReuse Research Foundation (WRRF) which is responding to protracted drought in south-western USA, particularly California.
Water Research Australia Limited (WaterRA) can be traced back nearly 20 years to the Cooperative Research Centre for Water Quality and Treatment (1995–2008). Re-established as Water Quality Research Australia in 2008, it became Water Research Australia in 2013. It is a not-for-profit entity, with 43 members including 17 urban and regional water corporations, 17 universities, 5 industry groups and the Departments of Health of New South Wales and Victoria. It can anticipate some funding continuity, albeit reduced by winding down of sources from the Victorian Smart Water Fund and the Commonwealth government through the National Water Commission.44
On 13 December 2013, COAG replaced its 22 Standing Ministerial Councils, Select Councils and governance fora with a set of eight Councils. The decision saw the revocation of the Standing Council on Environment and Water which had been responsible for coordinating Commonwealth/States/Territories water policies.45 This has created uncertainty in how national cooperation on water reform will be achieved and advanced in future.
As a result of provisions in the 2014 Commonwealth budget papers, the office of the National Water Commission, responsible for driving water reform in Australia, was closed on 24 December 2014.46
Australia's performance in providing safe drinking water remains high and drinking water is consistently safe and of a high quality. In 2012–2013, all but three water utilities across Australia with 10000 or more connections reported 100 percent compliance with relevant microbiological standards. But while the supply diversity measures have ensured cities have secure water supplies, this has come at a cost. Government decisions about major recycling and desalination infrastructure investment were not always well communicated in terms of the costs and benefits of the alternative options considered. This has undermined community confidence that it is receiving value-for-money services. Large-scale augmentation decisions taken in Victoria and South East Queensland were considered particularly contentious because of a perceived lack of transparency in decision-making. Changes in organisational structures are being suggested. Governments and communities are starting to discuss ways that increased private sector investment can enable existing public capital investments to be released for further use in the water or other infrastructure sectors. Successful national reforms typically involve leadership, coordination and facilitation. The Commission called on Australia's state and territory governments to work together to deliver better outcomes for their constituents as well as the national economy.47
Droughts will return. Australia has developed most of the policy framework and infrastructure to face them. Yet there is more to be done. A National Water Quality Management Strategy Guideline on the economic regulation of water utilities would be valuable. Research capacity should be maintained. New urban, industrial and agricultural approaches to planning and design, integrated with water and wastewater services should be encouraged, increasingly incorporating recycled water as appropriate and economic “fit for purpose” technologies are advanced. Policy collaboration between levels of government should be reinforced. Continuing reform and innovation must be maintained.
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