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The rains have finally arrived in the Northern Murray Darling Basin. Hopefully, this drought-easing water will flow all the way down to the parched communities and degraded habitats of the
lower Darling. How much water goes downstream, however, does not just depend on how much it has rained. It also greatly depends on how much is extracted and consumed upstream, and the rules
and enforcement around these water extractions. Simplistic or knee-jerk responses to water insecurity, such as banning irrigation for “thirsty crops” such as cotton, will not fix the water
woes of the basin. The harder and longer path is to deliver real water reform as was agreed to by all governments in the 2004 National Water Initiative and that includes transparent water
planning enshrined in law. ------------------------- _ READ MORE: THE SWEET RELIEF OF RAIN AFTER BUSHFIRES THREATENS DISASTER FOR OUR RIVERS _ ------------------------- BASIN COTTON
IRRIGATORS EXTRACT ABOUT FIVE SYDNEY HARBOURS’ WORTH A YEAR Irrigation accounts for about 70% of all surface water extracted in the basin. Australia’s water accounts tell us that in 2017-18,
basin cotton irrigators extracted some 2,500 billion litres (about five Sydney Harbours’ worth) or equivalent to about 35% of all the water extracted for irrigation. Most of this water was
extracted in the Northern Basin (covering southern Queensland and northern New South Wales). But increasingly cotton is becoming a preferred crop in the Southern Basin (southern NSW to South
Australia). Overall, the area of land in cotton and the water extracted for cotton increased by 4% in 2017-18 relative to 2016-17. Cotton is a thirsty crop. According to the Australian
Bureau of Statistics cotton uses, on average, more than 7 million litres (or about three Olympic-sized swimming pools) per hectare. At a global scale, the volume of water extracted by cotton
irrigators to produce one kilogram of cotton fabric averages more than 3,000 litres. INCREASED WATER EFFICIENCY: GOOD NEWS FOR SOME, BAD NEWS FOR OTHERS Concerns over how much water cotton
uses, and the high price of water in the basin, has incentivised cotton farmers to increase their cotton yield (in tonnes) per million litres of water extracted. This has been achieved with
improved genetics, management and more high-tech irrigation methods. According to Cotton Australia, much less water (only 19%) is flowing back into streams and groundwater from water applied
to cotton fields than two decades ago, when the return flows were 43% of the water applied. Increased irrigation efficiency is good news for cotton irrigators, especially those that
received some of the A$4 billion in public money already spent to increase irrigation efficiency in the basin. But it is bad news for downstream irrigators, communities and the environment.
This is because a much greater proportion of the water extracted by cotton farmers now gets consumed as evapo-transpiration, and thus is unavailable for anyone or anything else. WE NEED TO
CHANGE THE RULES OF THE GAME Given these cotton facts, would banning the growing of cotton in Australia increase the water available? No – because the problem is not cotton irrigation per
se, but rather the “rules of the game” of the who, how, and when water is extracted. These water sharing rules are determined at a state level in what are called Water Sharing Plans. Proper
water planning is the only way to ensure a fair deal, deliver on the intent of the 2012 Basin Plan and keep levels of water extraction at sustainable levels. Water sharing plans are supposed
to be consistent with the 2012 Basin Plan. But NSW has, so far, failed to provide its plans for auditing by the Murray-Darling Basin Authority, missing the key July 1, 2019 deadline.
Following an expose of alleged water theft in July 2017, the NSW government created a specialised agency, the Natural Resources Access Regulator, that has greatly helped water monitoring and
compliance in NSW. Despite its best efforts, there is still inadequate metering in the Northern Basin. And across the basin as a whole, most groundwater extractions are not properly
monitored. The actual rules about how much water can be extracted are substantially influenced by some irrigators in the consultation process before plans are implemented. Such influence has
resulted in some water sharing plans favouring upstream irrigators at the expense of downstream communities, such as Walgett and Wilcannia. These towns have been left high and dry despite
the fact NSW law gives priority to town water supplies over other water uses. According to the NSW Natural Resources Commission, the current Barwon-Darling Water Sharing Plan “effectively
prioritises upstream water users” and also does not provide protection for environmental water from extraction. The Natural Resources Commission also observed that extraction permitted under
the plan: > has affected those communities and landholders reliant on the river > for domestic and stock water supplies, town water supply, community > and social needs. A
consultant’s report from 2019, written for the NSW government, also found no evidence in the Barwon-Darling water planning processes of reporting on performance indicators such as changes in
stream flow regimes, ecological values of key water sources or water utility (for town supply) access requirements. Sadly, the problem of poor water planning is not exclusive to the
Barwon-Darling, but exists in other basin catchments in NSW, and beyond. HOLDING GOVERNMENTS RESPONSIBLE Any effective solution to the water emergency in the basin must, therefore, hold
governments responsible for their water plans and decisions. This requires that a “who, what, how and when” of water be made transparent through an independent water auditing, monitoring and
compliance process. Simplistic responses to water insecurity, such as banning irrigation for cotton, will not fix the water woes of the basin. The harder and longer path is to deliver real
water reform as was agreed to by all governments in the 2004 National Water Initiative and that included transparent water planning enshrined in law. ------------------------- _ READ MORE:
FISH KILLS AND UNDRINKABLE WATER: HERE'S WHAT TO EXPECT FOR THE MURRAY DARLING THIS SUMMER _ ------------------------- THREE THINGS THAT WOULD MAKE A DIFFERENCE As a nation we must hold
decisionmakers accountable so the rules of the game do not favour the big end of town at the expense, and even the existence, of towns. We also need to: * stop wasting billions on
irrigation subsidies that reduce flows to streams and rivers * monitor, measure and audit what is happening to the water extracted and in streams * actually deliver on the key objects of the
federal Water Act and state water acts. Enforcing the law of the land would ensure those who have the legal right to get the water first (such as town water supplies) are prioritised in the
implementation of water sharing plans. It would mean state water plans are audited and actually deliver environmentally sustainable levels of water extraction.