Condoms or bulldozers
During 2009, water storages in many cities and towns became perilously depleted. Some to below 10% capacity.
Our nation's water managers regurgitated the get-out-of-jail-free explanation conveniently used for decades by politicians;
When in doubt, blame the drought.
Then they pushed the panic buttons.....new pipes to divert water from here to there. Recycling sewage. Desalination. Water saving devices and regulations.
So how did we get into this mess?
I keep wondering just how much different the principle of supplying water for a town or nation is to what we had to do in the early years at GOF's Paradise.
We had to build a dam to provide adequate year-round reserves of water for domestic use, and to grow food for ourselves, and have surpluses to sell to make our living.
We installed tanks, pipes and pumps to move the water around.
None of this involved rocket science.
Before constructing the dam I had pangs of environmental guilt about flooding a beautiful fern gully, but it occupies only 1% of our total area, and is now home to platypuses, waterlilies, fish and birds.
We also planted 5 acres of forest to encourage mother nature's forgiveness.
Governments of Australia in the early 1900's had a vision. One that included the construction of many inland water storages.
We once had water enough to waste on inefficient irrigation practices, and public urinals in a constant state of flush.
How did we get from that to the legislatively enforced desertification of suburbia we now have?
Drought, no doubt has contributed, but we've had that in the past.
Perhaps that our population has doubled since the last major storage dam was constructed might coincidentally have something to do with it?
What to do?
Zero population growth. My previous deliberations on this subject were as popular as putting my mongrel dog into the Royal corgi breeding kennels, so I will explore the remaining possibilities.
Conserve and recycle. Good, but someday our increasing population will catch up with the limits of that possibility too.
GOF's logic would impertinently suggest that once a town's dam is empty with no facility to refill it, then any of its programs for conserving and recycling water will instantly become null and void. Like the town itself.
Build new dams in strategic locations which are periodically subject to flooding. We all understand that some personal money kept in the bank is some protection against the inevitable financial "rainy day". Why then should Governments not ensure maximum water storage as a buffer against drought. Research could also be directed into methods of limiting evaporation from those storages.
Let politicians dream like they did 100 years ago and have the conviction to put the dreams into reality. Affected landowners facing eviction or a life of treading water will naturally object to dam construction.
Offer them compensation of double market value and most of their objections will evaporate. (During construction of the Hume Dam last century an entire town was relocated.)
Environmentalists will complain vehemently, and that is their right. Trade them "5 acres of forest" and some platypuses and birds to play around with, and let them know how their children will love water sports, and fun with a fishing line, and be nutritionally enriched by the vegetables they will be able to once again grow in their backyards.
Failure to adopt these alternatives leaves us with only one other.
We must get the water where mother nature always found it.
In the ocean.
Desalination.
Now perhaps that will require something a little more like rocket science.
Comments
I once saw a couple in the wild somewhere around Kangaroo Valley - fascinating creatures.
Kalgoorlie has the highest per capital water use in Australia followed by Alice Springs at an average of around 1015 litres per person per day. The average American uses 805 litres per day and the average Gambian uses only 4.5 litres per day. (from Desert Knowlege Australia).
I mention this because we are finally about to have a pipe line completed out to Horsham. Can you believe we have had an open channel all this time with huge losses to evaporation and cow shit lowering the quality?
For a country that regularly suffers too many folk for the existing water supply, this is down right appalling. (You think I don't bring this up with coalition Voters?)
I do think the trouser snake problem has a serious impact but no one seems to be inclined to guestimate what level of population we can support. If we did that we could design infrastructure against demand.
Nice topic GOF. This always get me fired up.
When I was doing some research for this story I stumbled across the fact (?) that Oklahoma has more stored water than any other state in the US.
Unless something is done soon one of our major cities will totally run out of water.
I suspect if Canberra was ever at risk, preventative action would be rather prompt.
And yes we do have platypuses in the dam and in the small creeks below it. They are hard to see in much detail, but every morning and evening they breach the surface of the dam in their search for food. You are welcome to come and look at our platypuses anytime.
As you probably know I am a great supporter of farmers and agriculture, but their water use practices in the last 50 years have been abysmal. Flood irrigation on previously fertile soil has rendered them useless with salinity buildup. The headwaters of the Darling are completely blocked by a dam and the water used by some conglomerate business venture just to irrigate cotton. The Murrumbidgee Irrigation Area and northern Victoria still use hundreds of miles of open irrigation channel to move water around. I would at least hope they are not still using the precious water to try and grow rice in the semi-desert MIA.
Gets me fired up too Peter. Nice to have your support.
Guess that made an impression, eh?
I'm with you on farmers and agriculture but I would love to see the Greens and Farmers get their heads together. The extremes in both groups are shockers who don't think compromise is possible and some even seem to work to widen the gap.
If these two groups start to recognise common ground and work together then a lot of improvements can be made. Once the Nats have disappeared things should get easier and if the Greens get rid of the jokers in the skeleton suits it will get better again.
I am concerned that the Nats will finally realise they can't survive just on the money from the mining industry (they still need votes) and start working harder to expand the gap. Life is so much easier for the spoilers.
Incidentally, of the 12 reservoirs 6 are at 0% because the water is being directed to the better storage options. The closed dams are very shallow and are really just evaporation ponds in the new climate.
One that is still in use is Lake Fyans which in the good old days was popular for picnics because the kids could walk out 100 meters from the beach and still be only waist deep in water. It currently has sits at 20% of capacity and last week added 50 MegaLitres from run off. That's a 1.7% increase over the week for that storage.
Sounds like the large areas of inland Australia which were ploughed up for cropping last century, then winds came and blew all the soil to as far away as New Zealand.
Fingers crossed that you get some good winter rain.
We have just recorded the driest June ever. 6mm, when the average is 250.
This for us is just a wonderful bonus. 100 inches already this year and fine weather is most welcome.
The politics behind agriculture is mostly beyond my comprehension, and I always welcome any assessments you care to enlighten me with.
A fair amount soaked in at the start but a bit more we be nice. If it comes soon enough it will go straight to storage.
You must be continually mowing the lawn with that level of rain last month.
The politics behind the Nats is an ugly picture. Not so long ago Barnaby Joyce sided with the farmers in a dispute with the Mining lobby. I don't know what he was thinking at the time but the upshot was the major mining body jumped on the phone to complain and went PUBLIC with their complaint as punishment.
Of course the Honorable Member had to back down on national television. I am not so naive as to believe these guys aren't for sale but to be so public about it is a slap in the face for the farmers who support their claim to hold farmers interests as a priority.
We had 6 years straight of drought (not this year, mind you!) and lost many trees that were over 100 years old. People at work bitched if it clouded up because they wanted to BBQ.
California.
-Hence recent references to the Cali trip being to the land of milk and honey.
The Dust Bowl directly affected my family. I may have been born in 1971 but my grandparents were born in the 1880s (one side) and I was raised by the grandmother who was born in the 1920s. Gives a different perspective, perhaps.
It's all about choice once we're adults, though.
Being a generous old fart I probably would not call most people "stupid" ;-) but most are so carried along unthinkingly in the stampede for riches and the comforts of life, that they have lost sight of all the basic elements required to sustain us.
Love your last sentence. Well said.
I would have thought you'd be straining out the tadpoles through your teeth every time you had a mouthful.
They are only providing from the deeper catchments or the quality would be even worse.
You just haven't spent enough time around city folk ... or my coworkers. :P
It is a matter I have given some thought to, with the possibility of G'sP being compulsorily acquired for the use of the original inhabitants. I would of course firstly need the use of a bulldozer to return the land to its original condition.