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News |

NSWIC latest media release states that "IPART has added to the cost squeeze on NSW farmers with its final determination today to increase rural water bills by up to 8.3% in most valleys for 2025-26."
"NSW Irrigators’ Council CEO Claire Miller said it was disappointing that IPART had shifted from the affordable 1.9% plus CPI price rise proposed in its information paper last month."
“The determination underlines the need for the NSW Government to urgently reform the flawed pricing model and corporate structure driving unaffordable hikes in rural water bills over the last 10 years.”

For the full story follow the link.

News |

IPART has decided to issue a 1-year determination commencing on 1 July 2025 and ending 30 June 2026, or when replaced
From 1 July, prices will increase by 5.8% plus inflation of 2.4% for bulk water customers. MDBA charges will increase by 0.6% plus inflation of 2.4% and BRC charges will increase by 1.1% plus inflation of 2.4%. All other prices will increase by inflation only.​
At this stage, the Tribunal is not convinced that all the increased costs proposed by WaterNSW are sufficiently justified as necessary or efficient, or that they should all be passed on the customers. The short determination will allow more work to be done on the broader challenges identified through this price review.
The GVIA requested a full performance review and analysis of the business structure. ​

News |

The AgriEmpower Scholarship Program is an investment in the future of our next generation of changemarkers, dedicated to helping young people enhance their capabilities and unlock new opportunities for growth.
The program offers financial support, resources, and access to National Farmers’ Federation and Woolworths networks, and a community of like-minded individuals, all with the goal of driving long-term success in the agriculture sector.
As part of the $400,000 program, 20 scholarships of $20,000 each will be awarded.

The AgriEmpower Scholarship Program runs for 18 months allowing individuals an opportunity to deep dive into developing themselves and with the support of NFF & Woolworths.

Events |

Save the Date
Thursday 24th July 2025, we will be celebrating 30 years of the GVIA. 
More details to follow shortly. 

Submissions |

The link is to the submission by the GVIA to the NSW Parliament’s Legislative Assembly Committee on Investment, Industry and Regional Development
To the inquiry into the Impacts of the Water Amendment Act 2023 on NSW regional communities.

Within the GVIA submission we raise issues associated with 
* Government Performance
* Impacts of Rules-based changes
* The Risk Assignment Framework
* Floodplain Harvesting regulations and
Other Water related matters such as 
* Over-recovered water
* Water Resources Plans
* Wetlands
* NRAR and
* the NRC. 

Member Updates |

The NSW Irrigators Council April newsletter is now available. The Top issues discussed include.

  1. Parliamentary Inquiry: Restoring Our Rivers
  2. Revised wetland mapping in water sharing plans
  3. IPART draft report on rural bulk water pricing
  4. Sustainable Diversion Limits Adjustment Mechanism update
  5. Non- Urban Metering


News |

This month's NSW-DQ webinar focused on "Are You Measurement Ready". A recording is available here and responses to questions taken on notice will be available here in the next fortnight.

Some key take aways:
  • All water users should check their licence and approvals to ensure the details are correct, and ensure they are following their conditions.
  • Water users subject to the mandatory metering condition but eligible for exemption should use the online metering guidance tool and take a record of what exemption they believe they can claim.
  • Metering requirements apply to Unregulated users as well as Regulated.

Floodplain Harvesting |

To take FPH entitlement in the Gwydir you must have Primary storage meters installed and validated by a DQP on all the storages in your works approval. 

Users looking to find out the storage levels on the DAS before starting an FPH event, and then at the end of an FPH event may find this video useful.

The primary storage meters record on approximately 15 minute intervals, but only upload onto the DAS once a day, so ensure you monitor your FPH take using a secondary storage meter or gauge boards. 

To log onto the DAS you will need a username and password.
You should have received an email with this information on it. To find this email search WaterNSW+DAS, it may have landed in the junk folder. 

This link provides useful tools for water users

Member Updates |

NSW Irrigators Council newsletter March 2025. Topics include

  1. Federal election and Budget
  2. NSWIC March General Meeting
  3. Expanding NRAR's enforcement powers
  4. Water sharing plans and wetland mapping saga
  5. Murray-Darling Basin Plan updates

Floodplain Harvesting |

As we have seen rain in the recent week, it is possible that there may be opportunity for FPH where you have all the storages in your works approval fitted with a primary storage meter certified by your DQP.
Entitlement holders with a point of intake meter completed and approved by your DQP will also be able to access FPH entitlement. 
This is the link to the WaterNSW Gwydir FPH fact sheet
This is the link to the department Gwydir FPH and licensing page. 

News |

As we will now have a federal election on the 3rd of May 2025, I encourage you to have conversations with people from all different parts of the community to ensure they understand what is important to safegard the Australian irrigation industry. The following links will show you what the peak industry organisations have as their election policy positions. There are also a number of useful facts about irrigation which you may be able to utilise in your discussions. 

National Irrigators Council

NSW Irrigation Council

National Farmers Federation

Member Updates |

Following the review of the Non-Urban metering framework there are some changes that are of importance for smaller users. 
A summary of the changes to the rules around non-urban metering are available here. There is also information to step you through how to ensure you are compliant. 
Some points to note:
* Smaller water users across NSW with works nominated by total entitlements of >15 ML and <100 ML, (unless otherwise exempt) have until 1 December 2027 to comply or by the work approval renewal, whichever is later.
* Water users with entitlements of 15 ML or less are not required to install a meter unless trading water allocations. However, recording and reporting water usage remains mandatory.

The government have updated the metering guidance tool, so you can check if you need a meter or telemetry.

News |

The department sought public feedback in late 2023 on proposed changes to distance restrictions for new or amended bores from other bores or property boundaries in the Water Sharing Plan for the NSW Great Artesian Basin Groundwater Sources 2020 (the plan).

At this time, feedback from stakeholders indicated that the community needed further information on the proposed changes. To address the community's questions, we released a Status Update Document on 17 February 2025, outlining what’s changing and why. Public feedback on this document and the proposed changes is welcome until 6 April 2025.

Submissions |

The GVIA have completed a thrid submission on the update Gwydir unregulated WSP in this submission we make the following recommendations. 

1. We request that any wetland identification not be included as a component of any Water Sharing Plan (WSP) regulated or unregulated now or at any time into the future as it adds no benefit to the public given that any changes to water access in WSP is already accounted for.

2. We request clarity on the financial, legal and production implications of gazetting wetland sites as members have major concerns as to how rules may be interpreted or adjusted in the future.

3. Although we do not support the creation of wetlands on private land, we request that the Department consult with all landholders directly and that ground truthing of any wetland include all sites gazetted in all earlier versions of the Gwydir Unregulated and Regulated Water Sharing Plans.

4. Although we do not support the creation of wetlands on private land, if the Department wishes to identify any new wetlands as a standalone process, unrelated to any Water Sharing Plan, the process must include individual consultation will all landholders likely to be impacted by the identification of a wetland, this includes all neighbouring landholders.

5. We request that following ground truthing and consultation with landholders, to confirm the existence of a wetland, if the Department continues to include them unnecessarily in Water Sharing Plans, then they should be included as a detailed list as in Schedule 4 and Schedule 5 of the Water Sharing Plan for the Gwydir Unregulated River Water Sources 2012 and be supported by the interactive map. We cannot accept a map alone as we have no confidence it will be tamper proof.

Events |

Please find included information on a film being screened at the Town and Country Club, 5 Frome St Moree on Friday the 4th of April. 
The film writer Leila McDougall will be a special guest at the event. 
This screening is proudly sponsored by mcGregor Gourlay Agricultural Services, AFF, NSW Farmers and CWA Moree
The event beguins at 6pm and there is no charge. 

News |

The NSW legislative assembly are conducting an inquiry into the Impacts of the Water Amendment (Restoring Our Rivers) Act 2023 on NSW regional communities. The chair is Roy Butler and has been designed to consider the following:

a) the social, economic and environmental impact of repealing limits to the cap on Commonwealth water purchases
b) the risks to the effective implementation of the Federal Water Amendment (Restoring Our Rivers) Act 2023 including unlicensed take of water and options to address these risks such as rules for floodplain harvesting
c) the impact of Planned Environmental Water rules on the reliability of water allocations in NSW and the Commonwealth's environmental water holdings
d) the impact of rules-based changes on the reliability of water allocations in NSW, including their impact on different water license categories
e) the effectiveness and impacts of past water reforms, including community-based water reduction adjustment programs such as the Strengthening Basin Communities program and Murray-Darling Basin Economic Development Program
f) options to improve future community-based reduction adjustment programs including next rounds of the Sustainable Communities Program
g) any other related matter. Submissions are Due 14th April 2025

News |

Today the NSW Government released media associated with wetlands in the NSW unregulated WSP. There has been significant changes to the proposals, a direct result of the feedback from each of you. We thank the NSW water Minister and her department for responding to the feedback they received.
There are still however newly prescribed wetlands in the Gwydir. Landholders who still have sites on their land, which they do not support as wetlands have until the 23rd March to provide feedback to the department, as the plan is still subject to change through the public consultation period. 
In addition we will be reinforcing the need for any landholder impacted by these new and all existing wetlands to be directly consulted by the department. Gazetting a wetland without appropriate consultation is not acceptable. 
The updates on the department website include mapped wetland areas limited to internationally significant Ramsar listed wetlands, those registered in the Directory of Important Wetlands of Australia, any wetlands already receiving protection in the current water sharing plans and wetlands identified as ecologically and/or culturally significant in previously exhibited floodplain management plans.
People can also attend a webinar from 12.30-1.30pm on Wednesday 12 March 2025 to learn more.

News |

The Basin Plan 2012 was made under Part 2 of the Water Act 2007 (Cth) (the Water Act) to guide the management and sharing of water in the Basin in a more sustainable way. There have been hugh changes to water management as a result. 
Summary of findings:
Four NSW Water resource plans remain to be accredited - the Gwydir is one of them. 
All 54 SDL resource units within non-accredited WRP did not exceed compliance triggers in 2022-23
As of June 2024 there had been 2,131.7GL/yr Surface water recovered, only 22GL remained at that stage. 35.25GL/yr of groundwater had been recovered with only 3.2GL remaining.
This year we expect to see the Sustainable Rivers Audit and the Basin Plan evaluation, these together with the Outlook for the Basin, Sustainable Yields and Discussion Paper will be utilised as an evidence base for the 2026 Basin Plan Review.

Member Updates |

Key topics of Interest
 - Presentation of successes of Basin Plan to Legal-wise water symposium
 - National Water Agreement NSW Workshops
 - NSW telemetry review
 - Inquiry to Water amendment bill 2023 impacts on regional communities
 - NSW minimum inflow project

News |

Irrigators question recent efforts by Minister Plibersek to consider socio-economic impacts of buybacks

25 February 2025, Canberra, ACT – Irrigators call out Minister Plibersek’s decision to sign off[ on purchasing another 100 GL of water in the southern Basin with questionable procurement processes and deliberately narrow evidence to support the decision.

“The advice before the Minister to inform the decision is flawed,” said Zara Lowien, CEO of National Irrigators’ Council.

“The additional 170 GL of water (from a 2024 round and this new one), will cause a significant increase in water allocation price of around 7.2% in the southern Murray Darling, and impact some industries particularly hard, such as rice, with an estimated 6.48% drop in water use.”

“The narrow assessment only looked at buying back 170 GL/y of water and apportioned $84 million annual production losses, ignoring that more than 2,100 GL/y is now recovered with an estimated annual farm-gate production loss between $602 million - $914 million.”

“Can the Minister really say she has considered socio-economic impacts, if the impact assessment is designed to not capture the full impacts?” said Ms Lowien.

“Worse still, the evidence highlighted the range of government programs aimed at mitigating the known socio-economic impacts but failed to mention the minimal progress of these other strategies”.

“Updates show there are no ‘new’ efficiency alternatives contracted, no land and water partnerships, and only NSW has signed up to their flagship program: Sustaining Basin Communities.”

News |

In a clearly political move to win city votes at the expense of regional Australia, the Commonwealth has today kicked off a second buyback tender in the southern Murray-Darling Basin in 2024-25. NSW Irrigators’ Council CEO Claire Miller said with an election due any moment, “today’s announcement is clearly intended to try to win city votes while throwing regional communities, farmers and even the environment under the bus. “Today we learn the Government is full steam ahead to buy up to another 100 billion litres in 2025, on top of the 70 billion litres from its first tender opened last year. “The minister claims she considers social and economic impacts before approving buybacks. Considers maybe, but clearly ignores when ABARES says past and planned water recovery wipes $602 million – $914 million every year from what the farmgate value of irrigated agriculture would otherwise be.
“The one-off $300 million assistance package will not even touch the sides of what irrigation-dependent communities need when the Government is stripping hundreds of millions of dollars in income from their economies every year.
“We also know that while more than 3000 GL recovered to date is delivering important, localised environmental benefits, more water will not deliver the Basin-wide step change needed to reverse declining native fish and static waterbird populations, and improve water quality.

News |

19 February 2025, Canberra, ACT – The release of the Auditor General’s report of the Federal Government’s water buybacks finds the Government implemented a well-paved road of effective process but struggled to find the link between the buyback program and the intended policy objectives for the Murray Darling Basin Plan.  

“Many will glance at the key findings of effective process and give the Government a pat on the back, but the devil is in the detail when the report goes on to question the link between the buyback program and the intended policy objectives for the environment” said National Irrigators’ Council CEO, Ms Lowien.

“It found that the buyback program, designed to bridge the gap between current diversions and the Basin Plan’s Sustainable Diversion Limits (SDLs), was a well-paved road but questions, to where?”, said Ms Lowien.

“Achieving Sustainable Diversion Limits in the Basin was the centrepiece of the Basin Plan, but achieving the broader environmental objectives requires going beyond just adding water,”

“Government reporting indicates that SDLs are enforced and being achieved– so it’s fair to ask the question, as the Auditor General infers, why is the Government buying more water and not investing in other solutions?” said Ms Lowien.

News |

Media snippets (not endorsements):

  • Water allocations face potential shake-up with climate review under way [HERE]
  • Minister Plibersek concedes that the accreditation of water resource plan is unlawful [HERE]
  • These Traditional Owners are demanding that First Nations voices are heard on water [HERE]
  • Buybacks inquiry launched [HERE]
  • Landholders want to see changes to water basin plan [HERE]
  • Farmers fear forced flood easements [HERE]
  • MDBA plans for year ahead [HERE]
  • Research confirms environmental water supports “nerve system” of Narran Lakes (Dharriwaa) [HERE]

News |

Proposals by Water NSW and WAMC would result in water prices to increase by 170% within five years. “Here in the Gwydir valley, we grow pecans, oranges for fruit juice, as well as cotton, all of which is at risk due to these exorbitant proposed price hikes,” Mr Cush said.

“But this is not just about farmers – households in Moree and other towns will also be hit through council water utilities, as well as other water licence holders like local golf clubs, rugby and cricket grounds and children’s parks.”

News |

The Telemetry Uplift Program aims to assist eligible water users in the Murray-Darling Basin with compliance to the metering rules, to ensure water taken from inland regional water sources is extracted fairly, equitably and according to the rules. 
By opting in to the program, eligible water users will be offered free telemetry devices, including a local intelligence device (LID) and data logger. 
The $10.5 million Australian Government funded program will benefit over 2,500 eligible water users.

Register your interest by 31 March 2025 to receive further information and make sure you don’t miss out.

Submissions |

The GVIA recently lodged our submission into wetlands being prescribed into WSP. We made five recommendations: 


1. We request that any wetland identification not be included as a component of any Water Sharing Plan regulated or unregulated now or at any time into the future.

2. We request clarity on the financial, legal and production implications of gazetting new or existing wetlands.

3. Although we do not support the creation of wetlands on private land, if the government wishes to identify any new wetlands as a standalone process, unrelated to any Water Sharing Plan, the process must include individual consultation will all landholders likely to be impacted by the identification of a wetland, this includes all neighbouring landholders.

4. We request that the Department consult with all landholders directly and that ground truthing of wetlands include all sites gazetted in all earlier versions of the Gwydir Unregulated Water Sharing Plan.

5. We request that following ground truthing and consultation with landholders, the confirmed wetlands, if the Department continues to include them in Water Sharing Plans, then they should be included as a detailed list as in Schedule 4 and Schedule 5 of the Water Sharing Plan for the Gwydir Unregulated River Water Sources 2012 and be supported by the interactive map.

News |

The NSW Government is calling for expressions of interest to participate in the Australian Government’s next round of National Water Grid funding applications, likely in June 2025.
The National Water Grid initiative makes funding available for priority water infrastructure projects to improve the reliability and security of water for Australia’s regional and remote towns, agriculture and primary industry sectors.
Expressions of interest for the next funding round must be submitted no later than 11:00 pm (AEDT) on Thursday 27 February 2025, to allow sufficient time to prepare proposals and for the Water Group to have further discussions with proponents.

News |

The pricing proposals put to IPART for review by Water NSW and Water Administration Ministerial Corporation (WAMC) in November 2024 are we believe excessive. The GVIA have made submissions on both proposals and have had a one on one meeting with the IPART WAMC and WaterNSW regional and rural water price review teams to discuss our concerns. The team at NSWIC have also prepared a submission and held a meeting with IPART. 
Submissions to the IPART Issues paper are available here 

News |

Please find included a link to the January newsletter from the NSWIC. 

  1. Federal election 
  2. Basin Plan is working
  3. Proposed wetlands in inland WSPs
  4. National Water Agreement
  5. Review of rural water pricing 

News |

Meeting with Qld Water Minister Ann Leahy



Cotton Australia, National Irrigators' Council and Border Rivers Food and Fibre, met with the Hon Ann Leahy, QLD Minister for Local Government and Water, to discuss the proposed National Water Agreement (NWA) and provide insights into matters of concern.

Cotton Australia General Manager Michael Murray acknowledged that the current public draft of the agreement was much improved on previous versions released throughout last year, but there were still matters of significant concern and an overriding question as to what benefit signing the agreement would bring to a state like Queensland.

“Given the states are being asked to sign this agreement, but no money has been put on the table, it is hard to see why a state would voluntarily limit some of its decision-making capacity and commit significant resources to developing implementation plans, even if the proposed NWA was a good document that could be supported by stakeholders,” Mr Murray said.

Key areas of concern include:
  • The inclusion of the statement giving Indigenous Australians a concept of “Free, Prior and Informed Consent,” but no clarity on what this actually means within the context of water management, despite the glossary section assuring that it does not mean a right of veto.
  • The retention of the Risk Assignment framework (currently in the National Water Initiative) that allows, under some circumstances, the recovery of water from entitlement holders without compensation, where industry holds that if water recovery is required, it should be through market-based mechanisms.
  • A lack of recognition of the importance of irrigated agriculture in the draft.
  • Inclusion of a clause encouraging jurisdictions to move towards “Upper Bound” pricing, fortunately something Queensland rejects.


Cotton Australia will continue to work with the National Irrigators' Council, National Farmers Federation, Queensland Farmers Federation, and NSW Irrigators' Council to provide feedback to the federal and state governments on how this draft agreement can be improved.

Events |

NSW online workshop invitation
The NSW Government invites NSW stakeholders who have participated in the Australian Government’s consultations on a new national water agreement to join one of three online workshops to discuss the updated draft agreement.
The NSW-hosted workshops are an opportunity to:
  • discuss how feedback from NSW stakeholders has been incorporated into the updated draft agreement published by the Australian Government in December 2024
  • share any outstanding concerns ahead of the National Water Committee meeting in early February 2025.
To register for a workshop, please select one of the links below:

Monday 3 February, 10:00am to 12:00pm
Monday 3 February, 1:30pm to 3:30pm
Tuesday 4 February, 10:00am to 12:00pm

Submissions |

Public exhibition of the draft water sharing plan for the Gwydir Unregulated River Water Sources 2025 commenced on 4 November 2024, with submissions due 10th January 2025. 

Issues identified in the GVIA submission included.

  •         procedural process and appropriateness of proposals from both the Department and the NRC. 
  •         NRC recommended protection of “significant wetlands” 37 were already listed in existing plan. Lack of quality control in mapping exercise, poor data utilised to inform mapping, remote sensing not ground truthed. Lack of consultation or notification. 
  •         Requested data used to inform changes to BLR
  •         Support in principle numeric LTAAEEL but question ability to confidently develop it by 31st Dec 2026 given data gaps and ongoing failure of NSW Water Register.
  •         Reject NRC recommendation for limitations for carry over and conservative AWD’s and support the Department response.
  •         Asked for clarity on unregulated FPH subdivision in zone A or D
  •         Noted changes to Access 
  •         Rejected references to the Connectivity Panel Report.
  •         Highlighted property rights and for the need to purchase additional water if required or for any reduction to be fully compensated, including for any Specific purpose access licences.

Submissions |

At the end of 2024 IPART initiated their review of prices for WAMC and Water NSW. IPART sets the maximum prices that the Water Administration Ministerial Corporation (WAMC) and WaterNSW can charge their customers for water services. The maximum prices being set in these reviews apply from 1 July 2025. 
There are multiple demands for water in rural areas, including from agriculture, towns, industrial, and environmental licence holders. In NSW there is a complex system which delivers water to these diverse users.
• All customers (holding around 40,000 water access licences) pay charges to WAMC to cover costs of water planning, licencing and compliance activities across regulated rivers, unregulated rivers and groundwater systems.
• Around one-third of customers (holding around 13,000 water access licences) also pay charges to WaterNSW to cover costs of storing and delivering water in regulated rivers.
• WAMC’s and WaterNSW’s prices include components covering NSW’s contributions to the Murray-Darling Basin Authority (MDBA) and the Dumaresq-Barwon Border Rivers Commission (BRC).
IPART has released an Issues Paper covering both the WAMC and WaterNSW pricing proposals and presenting how the proposed price increases would impact customer bills. The information paper provides pricing information.
Here are the links to the GVIA Submissions for WAMC and WaterNSW

Member Updates |

The deadline for submissions on the 327 newly prescribed wetlands or possibly other sites listed as wetlands is Sunday 2nd February 2025.
We encourage anyone who does not agree with the identification of these wetlands located either on their property or downstream of their property, to put in a submission.
We have developed a template to guide you submission.
To get the Object ID and the Lot/DP for the sites enlarge the interactive map and click on the site in question. 
Submissions can be Emailed to: wspconsultation@dpie.nsw.gov.au
Could you please send a copy of your submission to us at gvia@gvia.org.au and we will include this in the GVIA submission.
If you would like to discuss this in person please give Lou a call on 02 6752 1399 or email her to arrange a time. The more submissions we have questioning the process and identification of these sites, the greater the chance we have of getting them removed. 
There is background information available on the department website if you would like more information. 

News |

Please find included the link to the NSWIC December newsletter. 
The GVIA work closely with the NSWIC to ensure we are able to advocate as strongly as possible for our members. This partnership will continue into 2025, and we thank our members for supporting the NSWIC through their levees. 
Issues covered in the newsletter include: Water pricing, the National Water Agreement, WSP and MDBA Constraints roadmap. 

News |

Included is the link to the 7 News regional from Thursday 9th January, where NSW National Party leader Dougal Saunders and Macquarie Food and Fibre Executive Officer Michael Drum talk about the implications from the proposals to add hundreds of newly prescribed wetlands into unregulated Water Sharing Plans across the state. 
The media talks about lack of consultation with landholders, implications for property sales and valuations and the use of remote sensing to identify the sites in question. It raises the need for compensation where there are impacts to landholders ability to run their businesses. 

Member Updates |

Submission for the Gwydir Unregulated WSP is do Friday 10th January. There are some noticeable changes to conditions for many unregulated river access licences. 
Please review your entitlements to determine what changes have been proposed to access. The changes are detailed in Section 3, from page 39 in the public exhibition draft for the Water Sharing Plan for the Gwydir Unregulated River Water Sources 2025. The conditions associated with your access licence can be checked on the NSW water register

News |

1 x 38 ML (megalitres) of Lower Gwydir Groundwater allocation for sale. You can bid in price/megalitre by emailing gvia@gvia.org.au before 5pm Friday 28th February 2025. The buyer will be required to cover the WaterNSW application and dealing fees and the GVIA transaction fee of $55.00 (Inc GST). Please note as of July 2024, there have been changes to the process for tiaging and assessing groundwater temporary trades. More information is available here

News |

Gwydir Valley Channel Capacity Constraints

6 January 2025: WaterNSW advises customers on the Gwydir River below Tyreel Weir that demand may exceed channel capacity in mid-January and throughout the remainder of the irrigation season. 
Water demand on the Lower Gwydir recently exceeded delivery capacity, resulting in temporary water delivery shortfalls in lower reaches of the Gwydir. 
Customers are encouraged to extract water only at ordered rates and only ordered volumes. 
Whilst current water orders and subsequent delivery forecast does not indicate a return to demand exceeding delivery capacity in the immediate future, it is anticipated that delivery constraints will occur throughout late January and early February 2025. 
Rostering of available channel capacity will occur if a return to demand exceeding available capacity occurs as was last experienced in January 2018.

Water orders can be placed by accessing iWAS at waternsw.com.au/iwas 
Water ordering information can be found at the WaterNSW website Ordering water - WaterNSW

For account enquiries please contact 1300 662 077.

More information: Visit WaterInsights to view announcements and sign up for notifications at waterinsights.waternsw.com.au
Issued by: Water Operations North

News |

Today the MDBA have released the Constraints Relaxation Implementation Roadmap. Constraints relaxation were identified as a necessary component to enhance environmental outcomes from water recovery in the original Basin Plan. They were the driving force behind schedule 5 Enhanced environmental outcomes to increase the volume of water resources available for environmental use by 450 GL per year. There will be challenges for producers in our region. The roadmap states:
"New South Wales is also at an advanced stage in the planning of constraints relaxation implementation in the Gwydir. Engagement with stakeholders and landholders has identified key issues to delivery that mean full implementation will likely extend beyond December 2026. The Australian and NSW governments are working together to rescope the Reconnecting Watercourse Country Program to ensure tangible outcomes are delivered to relax system constraints in the Gwydir by December 2026. In April 2025, NSW will provide an options assessment report to the Commonwealth identifying the preferred delivery option for a rescoped program."

Member Updates |

The NSW DCCEEWW have released the recording from the Wetlands webinar on Monday 9th. 
If you have any questions about the recording please contact the office on 02 67521399, or email gvia@gvia.org.au
To prepare a submission if you do not support an identified wetland please use this template as a starting base. If you send your submission to the GVIA we will include this in our submission as well to help reinforce that we do not accept the prescribed wetlands.
Importantly the recommendation was only to include significant wetlands, not all possible depressions on the floodplain. If any site identified does not have plants or animals that are adapted to and dependent on moist conditions for part of their lifecycle, then it is not a wetland. If you can evidence this with photos and cropping history this will be useful. 
We are also still waiting for evidence to support the claimed intent of inclusion the wetlands. 
Submissions for wetlands are due by the 2nd of February and can be emailed to wspconsultation@dpie.nsw.gov.au please specify the Gwydir unregulated WSP area in your response.

News |

The Draft Gwydir unregulated Water Sharing Plan includes 327 newly prescribed wetlands. If you have one of these on your property, or neighbouring your property you may wish to put in a submission to the NSW government raising your concerns. 
The included template is an example of what you might like to use in your submission to the NSW Government. Please replace the text highlighted yellow with your thoughts for the wetland you are concerned about. If you have any questions please don't hesitate to contact the GVIA on 02 6752 1399.
Anyone can put in a submission, these are due on the 2nd of February 2025. 
The following link provides a number of documents, including an interactive map regarding the water sharing plan and the wetlands. 
The department are hosting a webinar on the wetlands on Monday 9th December, You can register here.

Floodplain Harvesting |

The NSW department have developed a guided process map to help explain what is involved in getting storage metering established and operational. 
The fact sheet is available here
The process includes water supply works approvals, The installation and certification of equipment, storage curves, survey benchmarks and more. 

Member Updates |

The NSW Department have extended the due date for submissions to the draft Water Sharing Plan for the Gwydir Unregulated River Water Sources 2025 to Friday 10 January 2025.

Those with changes to access at their unregulated works should review
 - Schedule 1 to check flow class thresholds,
 - Schedule 2 to check access licences exempt from specified access rules and
 - Schedule 3 for access licences and approvals subject to specified cease to take conditions.

There is also an extension for submissions on the New prescribed wetlands until 2 February 2025.  This will provide much needed time for those impacted to collect evidence of why sites coloured yellow are not wetlands.  
I will distribute a template in the coming days to help you with your submissions.

There are one on one phone meetings available, and I recommend anyone with a wetland register for one of these. Book a phone call - please email wspconsultation@dpie.nsw.gov.au and specify your plan area in your response.
Submissions can be emailed to wspconsultation@dpie.nsw.gov.au.

The department are hosting an additional webinar on wetlands on 9 December 2024 from 12:30 to 1:30 - Register here

Member Updates |

If you have your Primary storage meters installed and certified or have a point of intake meter installed, you may want to nominate a Flood Plain Harvesting event. The following link is a video from Water NSW stepping you through how to start an event. 
Remember that only primary meters can be used in the Gwydir. 
There has also been a supplementary announcement made for several members. 

Member Updates |

The Department have just released the updated interactive mapping tool for the draft Gwydir Water Sharing Plan Prescribed Wetlands. 
This is quite different to the initial map.
Despite it being an improvement on the initial map, it still remains that there is a lack of clarity around the implications of what having a wetland on your country means. We will continue to investigate and provide feedback when we can. 

Member Updates |

On Tuesday 19th November the NSW Member for Northern Tablelands Mr Brendan Moylan raised concerns about the newly determined 327 wetlands that have been included in the latest review of the Gwydir Unregulated Water Sharing Plan. The full statement is available here. In it Brendan notes:
"The issue is that that plan has included an additional 327 wetlands within that valley. The mapping used to identify those 327 additional wetlands has not been based on ground truth. Quite frankly, it could not be. The difficulty this raises is from not only a water user's perspective but also a primary production perspective, particularly in circumstances where the Government is planning to give the native vegetation regulatory [NVR] map legal effect. The plan identifies an additional 327 wetlands, most of which are on private property, which will have flow-on effects—no pun intended—for the NVR map, particularly because those wetlands are located in areas that are otherwise unregulated country as defined by the NVR map.

Member Updates |

The recent release of the draft Gwydir Unregulated WSP has raised issues for many members. The draft includes details for access licences and approvals subject to specified cease-to-take conditions. These are detailed for specific access licences. 
If you have a Gwydir Unregulated Access Licence please review schedule 3 of the draft to see if your licence is listed. Please check the draft conditions with your existing conditions.
If you are not supportive of the proposed changes please prepare a submission detailing your objection. 

We would also recommend that you register for a one on one consultation to discuss your licence and any newly created wetlands that may have appeared on your country.
To book a phone call - please email wspconsultation@dpie.nsw.gov.au and specify your plan area in your response.

The date for submissions has been extended to the 10th January 2025 and can be lodged here
They can also be emailed to wspconsultation@dpie.nsw.gov.au.

Member Updates |

The draft Gwydir unregulated WSP includes proposed changes to access rules in the following water sources:
• Halls Creek Water Source,
• Rocky Creek, Cobbadah, Upper Horton and Lower Horton Water Source,
• Myall Creek Water Source,
• Moredon Creek Water Source and 
• Copeton Dam Water Source.
Access rules do not apply to take under basic landholder rights.

The draft plan also includes proposed changes to trade rules for water shares and allocations in the following water sources:
• Boorolong Creek Water Source
• Mackenzies Flat Water Source
• Mosquito Creek Water Source
For more information about these changes, go to the proposed changes fact sheet and the report cards on the department’s website.

Events |

The DCCEEW will be hosting a webinar on the draft Water Sharing Plan for the Gwydir Unregulated River Water Sources 2025.

This webinar on Tuesday 19th November 2024 from 12 noon will cover the following topics:

  • the draft water sharing plan
  • the public exhibition details, and
  • how to make a submission. 
A question-and-answer session will be held at the end of the webinar. Please include your questions when you register at the link below.
Alternatively email your questions to wspconsultation@dpie.nsw.gov.au.

There will also be a meeting in Bingara on Wednesday 27th November 2024. Register here

Member Updates |

On Monday 3rd Nov 2024 the NSW DCCEEW released the draft Gwydir Unregulated WSP with submissions due on Friday 13th Dec 2024. 
As part of this they have included an additional 327 prescribed wetlands. The plan includes aspects that are designed to improve protection of these newly created wetlands by restricting new surface water supply works and trade into these areas.
The draft plan proposes there will be no new works or trades allowed within or up to 3 km upstream of Ramsar listed wetlands or within a wetland displayed on the WSP prescribed wetlands map. The rules will not apply to replacement surface water supply works. 
The interactive map of these new wetlands is available here. Alternatively it can be accessed on the department weblink following. 
Our initial investigation of the map shows that several of these new sites are not wetlands. The selection of sites has most likely been via remote sensing using algorithms. The findings are unlikely to have been groundtruthed. 
To assist in managing this issue could you please
1. Look at the map for your properties to determine if you have one of these new wetlands on your country.
2. Determine if you support the inclusion of the area as a wetland. If you do then there will be restrictions on replacement on water supply works. There may be other restrictions into the future and you will need to consider what these may be. 
3. If you do not support the areas as a wetland you will need to provide evidence to support this. We are investigating what evidence is needed and will provide this information to you as soon as we can. 
The GVIA have had discussions with the department and the minister on this, and will be writing to them directly.
We will be preparing a submission on the draft WSP and are working to remove these new wetlands from the plan until there has been proper engagement with stakeholders.
If you have any questions or concerns please contact Lou via email or phone

News |

WaterNSW pricing proposal to double cost of rural water

Rural water users in NSW could see their costs more than double over the next five years if IPART accepts the WaterNSW pricing proposal released today. 
NSW Irrigators’ Council CEO Claire Miller said pricing proposal recommends hiking water bills by 21-24% every year for five years, adding up to $40,000 to a ‘typical’ farmer’s water bill by 2030.
“NSWIC is alarmed by this proposal and urges stakeholders across industries to understand the implications. Many stakeholders are not fully informed about the proposed prices, leaving them at risk of being unprepared until it is too late,” Ms Miller said.

Member Updates |

WaterNSW have today released their Pricing Proposal to IPART. There was an expectation for price increases, but 23% for High Security and 24% for General security is more than expected. 
There is also a proposal to have 32% increase for licenced Environmental Water, which is also proposed to be 100% fixed. 
There is proposed expenditure on fish passages ($108.8 million over five years or $21.8 million per annum) and cold water pollution ($47 million over five years or $9.4 million per annum) or $156 million over five years. These expenditures predominantly occur in Macquarie, Namoi, Gwydir, Lachlan, Murrumbidgee and Murray valleys. There are currently five fishways required in the Gwydir at an estimated cost of $250m and cold water pollution at $74m. These are unlikely to be progressed far in the next five years despite having been legislated many years ago. 
The link to the nearly 200 pages is included. 

Events |

This month’s focus is on Water Sharing Plans, what they are and why we need them. The presentation will cover how water sharing plans are remade and outline which inland plans are due to be remade by 1 July, 2025 and how you can comment on the proposed changes.
Speakers from the Water Group at the NSW Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water include:

  • Peter Hyde, Director Inland Water Planning
  • Antonia Morrow, Senior Advisor, Water Engagement team


Wednesday 16th October 2004, at 11am - 

Register Here

Submissions |

The GVIA support the original aims of a nationally compatible market, regulatory and planning based system of managing surface and groundwater resources for rural and urban use that optimises economic, social and environmental outcomes. We note that the establishment of water access entitlements (water rights) and planning arrangements to manage competing demands, are central to delivering these objectives.
The GVIA however are frustrated by the continued minimal open transparent engagement with all Australians now and during the development stages of the draft principles included in the NWA. Additionally, we are concerned that 20 years of challenging water reform across Australia has been disregarded. The National Water Initiative (NWI) was a foundation document that worked towards delivering a balanced approach to water management across Australia. It has made significant progress to address overallocation with the Murray Darling Basin (MDB) water take now well below Sustainable Diversion Limits (SDL). The NWA needs to move beyond over allocation acknowledging that it is no longer the major challenge impacting the health of our rivers, and address means to optimise outcomes from water for environmental, cultural, social and economic objectives.
The GVIA are concerned by the manner in which changes are being rushed through, and do not believe many of the principles are either appropriate to be included in a National Water Agreement or are fit-for-purpose as they have not been appropriately analysed nor discussed transparently with the state jurisdictions or those directly impacted by the principles.

Submissions |

We support the original aims of a nationally compatible market, regulatory and planning based system of managing surface and groundwater resources for rural and urban use that optimises economic, social and environmental outcomes. We however are frustrated that the federal department have released the discussion paper now. That there has been minimal open transparent engagement across all Australians now and during the development stages of The Paper. Additionally, we are concerned that 20 years of challenging water reform across Australia has been disregarded.
The organisation agrees that it is important to future proof the foundations of Australian water management and planning and address gaps through modernising. As such we recommend that the DCCEEW modernise the existing National Water Initiative 2004 in line with recommendations from the Productivity Commissions 2024 National Water Reform Interim report.
We do not agree that a re-write as signalled in the current discussion paper is necessary.

Submissions |

GVIA submission DCCEEW Draft 450GL Framework March 2024

The Water Amendment Act 2023 has made changes to the Water Act 2007 and the Basin Plan 2012. These amendments lifted the cap on buybacks, changed the way the 450GL can be recovered and removed the initial objectives of the 450GL from the southern connected system to the whole basin.
The original Murray Darling Basin Plan 2012 (the Plan) has achieved a significant amount, a fact the government should be actively promoting. 
Bridging the Gap is a crucial program aiming to achieve the valley based Sustainable Diversion Limit targets but there is concern that buy backs continue to result in “incidental over recovery”. As a valley directly impacted by over recovery, the Gwydir can assure you that the local community does not see the recovery of water over and above that required by the Basin Plan as “incidental”.
The GVIA appreciate that the extension of the timeframe for delivery was a practical step to push for the completion of the Plan. We are disappointed that the principle of the Plan; a healthy working basin with optimised social, economic and environmental outcomes, has been overshadowed by politics and that the focus is on volumes as opposed to the environmental outcomes, that include productive and resilient water dependent industries and communities with confidence in their long-term future.
The Government must recognise that simply adding more water is not the solution. Complementary measures such as fish passage, and progress on constraints measures as noted in 7.09 need to be implemented as they play an important role in water quality and the ability to get water to areas in the southern basin.

News |

Included is the NSW Irrigators Council September Newsletter. This includes commentary on;
Concerns raised by the Inspector-General for Water Compliance in an audit of DCCEEW, (federal) protocols to prevent insider trading on its Bridging the Gap (BTG) water buyback.
The release of the latest round of water buybacks under Bridging the Gap, aimed at recovering water to meet Sustainable Diversion Limits (SDLs) in the Condamine-Balonne and NSW Border Rivers.
The National Water Agreement which introducers a range of concerning proposals under the 302 principles that the federal government is trying to rush though before the next election.
The National Ag Rally - and the complete lack of consultation with farmers in areas which are critical to the sustainability of the industry - our Chair Jim Cush joins the 1-2,000 at the front of parliament house. 

Member Updates |

The draft Regulation and negotiation guidelines outline the approach the NSW government will take when negotiating voluntary agreements with landholders affected by future environmental water deliveries at higher flow levels, or under different regimes, than current operating practice. It is proposed to apply to Murray-Darling Basin Plan initiatives, including the Gwydir Reconnecting Watercourse Country Program.
The Department hosted two webinars, and held small group information sessions in the Gwydir: 
The recording of the Webinar from the 23rd Sepember is available here 

Submissions are due by the 24th November 2024. and can be completed either via the form available here or email your form to admin.rrcp@dpie.nsw.gov.au (with the subject line Landholder Negotiation Scheme Regulation).

Separate written submissions can also be emailed to admin.rrcp@dpie.nsw.gov.au (with the subject line Landholder Negotiation Scheme Regulation), or mailed to:

Landholder Negotiation Scheme Regulation
Water Group
Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water
Locked Bag 5022 Parramatta NSW 2124.

Making Every Drop Count

Securing a future for the Gwydir Valley through Irrigated Agriculture.