The NSW state government is considering evacuating the residents of as many as 90 towns that are seriously affected by drought if they completely run out of water.
For months, many towns in rural NSW have been relying on water being trucked in but that is only a short-term solution, and bore water is only available to some towns.
Prime7 News Central West late last month reported that the government would make the drastic move of relocating populations from towns without any water supply.
Asked by Prime TV how many towns were facing the prospect of completely running out of water, the state’s regional town water supply co-ordinator, James McTavish, said: “We have about 90 towns and communities that we have substantial concerns about now”.
“We are very keen to make sure that we use that [evacuation] as an absolute last case only and in every community we have a plan,” said Mr McTavish.
He said the government had not learned from the Millennium drought.
“We are looking to make sure we are never here again,” he told Prime7.
At the time of writing, the state government had not responded to requests from The Fifth Estate for more information about any evacuation plans.
But a state government source told The Fifth Estate the government was looking at all options – new weirs, pipelines and bores, as well as reverse osmosis systems to purify water supplies.
The source denied there were plans to relocate the town but said resourcing to address the problem had moved to the “next level”.
“It’s huge… there’s been a big shuffle,” they said, adding that nine hydrologists had been hired.
Little else is known about the government’s plans but it is believed they vary from town to town.
“Different towns need different systems,” the source said.
“Day Zero is about the flow on-ground. It doesn’t take into account underground aquifers. Some [towns] do have the possibilities for bores. Some towns are easier to truck water into.”
The source said there was some optimism in government circles that solutions would be found, citing how a pipeline to supply Broken Hill with water was completed in 2016 “two weeks before the town ran out of water”.
Broken Hill is now one of the safest in the state for water. However, the pipeline is believed to have cost $500 million and it’s unclear how many pipelines the state could afford to build.
For most towns, a two-tier approach was being used, the source said.
“The state government isn’t the utility provider; we don’t control the water; the local councils do.
“We step in when they need some help; we have the expertise. A lot of local councils do not have that expertise.”
Working out where to drill for bores is complicated and drilling is expensive, they said.
A request for interview with Mr McTavish was not responded to before publication.
People living in Bathurst, Orange, Dubbo and other communities afflicted by water shortages are worried about what any evacuation plans might look like, according to Bathurst councillor John Fry.
Cr Fry told The Fifth Estate people were worried about whether entire families and communities would be moved and if they would ever be able to return to their homes.
People were also worried their homes could be damaged by vandals, he said.
Cr Fry said that as of Thursday water in Bathurst’s dam had fallen to 37 per cent of capacity – the lowest level since the dam was rebuilt in 2000 – and it was evaporating at 1.1 percentage points per week, with “no reasonable hope of decent rainfall.”
Cr Fry, who learnt about the government relocation plans when he saw the Prime7 news report, said he tried, unsuccessfully, to find out more about the plans through a senior contact in the Department of Water, Property and Housing.
He said farmers in his area were currently buying water at $2.50 per one thousand litres and while people were not talking about Day Zero, irrigators had been put on notice by the council.
“Our irrigators have been told to cut back to 20 per cent pumping rate and when the dam gets to 22 per cent [of capacity], it’s a total ‘cease to pump’,” he said.
“We realise our irrigators provide our food but at the end of the day the city takes priority.”
Cr Fry said he recently put a motion to council to declare a water emergency but it was voted down. Other councillors said there was “no need to panic”, and that climate change was “a beat up”.
Cr Fry, who is also part of a business that works on rehydrating land through regenerative farming, said a lot could be done to retain moisture in the soil and plants. It was also possible to capture water from summer storms but the infrastructure wasn’t in place.
Bathurst can’t access bore water, and although people had been pushing for grey water recycling for some time council hadn’t seriously considered it.
“We’ve been talking about it for 20 years,” he said.
Spring 2019 was the driest season in 120 years for Australia, according to the country's Bureau of Meteorology. It has so far been followed up by a nearly equally dry summer with some of the hottest temperatures on record. That trend is likely to continue as the earth continues to get warmer, and it carries with it a pressing concern: a water crisis. As lakes are rivers start to dry up, those living in the rural interior of the massive island continent are already finding themselves rationing water just to survive, according to a report in the New York Times — and Australia's water crisis likely to only get worse.
This spring was the canary in the coalmine for Australians. The heat alone was enough to run the water reservoirs in some towns completely dry, leaving some citizens without running water. It forced people to ration their access by taking fewer showers, leaving gardens to die and dirty dishes and clothes to pile up without the necessary resource to clean them. But now that the fire season has started in the country and gotten off to a blazing start with dozens of out of control flames threatening hundreds of thousands of homes, the country is being pushed to the point of crisis. According to a report from Agence France-Presse, dozens of rural communities are already preparing themselves for Day Zero — the moment when water is turned off entirely. Unlike cities on the coast of the country, which can convert seawater into serviceable drinking water, there are not alternatives available for cities sitting in the middle of Australia watching water sources run dry. As fires continue to burn, towns have to make a choice between allowing citizens to continue accessing rations of their water reserves or using it to douse approaching flames. The situation is untenable at best and could leave large portions of the country completely uninhabitable.
It's not as if the current situation was unpredictable. Climate Council, a nonprofit organization that provides information on climate change to the Australian public, issued a report last year highlighting the gradual damage that climate change has wrought on the country. It found that droughts have become more common and soil moisture has decreased, resulting in less productive crops. Hotter temperatures and a lack of rainfall — as much as a 25 percent drop — has also led to streams, rivers, lakes and dams running dry. Western Australia in particular has seen a 50 percent decline in streamflow since the 1990s, according to the study. According to a report from the Guardian earlier this year, Australia's longest river, the Murray, has been severely affected by this sudden lack of rainwater — shrinking to just 910 gigalitres (GL) entering the system in the past 12 months when its annual average is 5,000 GL. Similarly, Macquarie River in New South Waleshas seen a massive drop off in water inflow, going from 1,448 GL annually to just 97 GL in the past two years.
These changes have been happening gradually — albeit not so gradually that people haven't taken notice —but are now occurring more drastically. The result is quite dire, particularly for rural farming and Indigenous communities that have made their homes in regions of the country experiencing water shortages. According to a report issued by WaterNSW — the New South Wales Government-owned water services company — if trends continue, the Lachlan River is projected to completely run dry by March 2020. That would leave towns in the central western parts of Australia without any reliable source of water. Border rivers are projected to become baren by September 2020, and northern towns relying on water from lakes systems and the Gwydir River could be cut off by March 2021. Even the city of Sydney, which houses more than five million Australians, could face a water crisis by October 2021 if the Nepean River ends up dry.
While the situation in Australia is pressing right now, it will be far from the only place to experience water shortages and impending crisis because of climate change. The idea of Day Zero looms for as much as one quarter of the world. A report from the World Resources Institute projects that as many as 255 million people currently live in cities that are at risk of experiencing a water crisis. That number is only expected to grow as global temperatures increase and extreme weather events like devastating droughts and land-destroying wildfires carry on for longer than expected. The report projects that nearly half a billion people, living across 45 major cities around the world, will be in high-stress areas that could face the reality of water shortages. These situations would only be exacerbated by recent findings that suggest our global water supplies are shrinking.
It may seem paradoxical that we are both seeing our water supplies dry up while some regions are also experiencing heavy and unmanageable levels of rainfall, but the fact is that dramatic weather events like these put more stress on our systems because they happen in a less predictable and manageable fashion. Water supplies like rivers and lakes require consistent levels of rainfall to prevent flooding from excess water and to keep the water source from drying out. It is entirely possible — in fact, it appears to be the case — that the planet will continue to experience extreme weather events like massive downpours and devastating droughts, both of which result in their own unique challenges for regions that face these wild and unpredictable swings.
As Australian towns face down Day Zero, so too have cities across the world. Cape Town, South Africa came within three months of a Day Zero event last year. Sao Paulo, Brazil was just 20 days away from its 22 million residents being without access to water in 2015. We are, as a civilization, on the brink of massive devastation caused by global warming, and it could come much sooner than the projections that say the worst will start happening in 2050 and beyond. In the next decade, you may go to fill a cup with tap water and find that nothing comes out. Day Zero may be only days away for some and when that day does come, there isn't a clear path back from the brink.
Australia's bushfires have been so devastating, the country's forests may not be able to
reabsorb the toxic carbon dioxide produced by the blazes, climate scientists say.
The NSW Department of Planning, Industry and Environment said it was yet to determine size of the fires' carbon footprint.However, experts fear the sheer scale and intensity of this year's unprecedented fires, coupled with worsening drought conditions, has disrupted this recovery process.
According to the Global Fire Emissions Database, the fires in the Amazon Rainforest in Brazil — which were burning at a rate not seen in almost a decade — added 14 million tonnes of carbon to the atmosphere this year.
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