Dam site better farmers hail increase to harvestable water limit

Coastal farmers in New South Wales will soon be able to capture 30 per cent of the rain that falls on their properties, in what the state government is calling a "historic step" towards preparing landholders for future drought and bushfires.

Key points:
  • The state government has announced a 30 per cent increase in harvestable rights for farmers on the coast
  • Farmers were previously allowed to store 10 per cent of the rain that fell on their property
  • The Nature Conservation Council fears the increase will be detrimental to downstream communities
  • Minister for Water Melinda Pavey said coastal farmers and landholders were previously allowed to store just 10 per cent of the water on their farms.

    "There was a unilateral change in 1999 that said that farmers could only take 10 per cent of the water on their farms across the state," she said.

    "That was unfair to farmers on the coast as they have three times the rainfall than inland regions."

    Ms Pavey said being able to harvest more water will ensure eligible farmers are more prepared for dry spells and bushfires.

    "We saw with the bushfires we had lots of dams that were empty that we couldn't even put helicopters in to take out water to put out the fires," she said.

    "This is a common-sense policy that will allow farmers and communities along the eastern seaboard to see themselves through inevitable dry periods."

    The new rules will only be allowed on first or second-order streams and will come into effect in early 2022 and will be monitored by the Natural Resources Access Regulator.

    Coastal Rights MapCoastal Rights Map Landholders in the striped area can benefit from the 20 per cent increase.(Supplied: NSW DPIE)Farmers welcome the change

    On-farm sustainability manager with Bega Cheese Melissa Balas says this is a significant increase for farmers on the south coast.

    "It's good news, it's something we've desperately needed for a long time, and it will take a lot of pressure off farmers who struggled during the drought," she said.

    Ms Balas said the increase would benefit farmers on the south coast, where dairy and beef farmers ran out of water back in 2019.

    "A 200-acre property, under the 10 per cent you could potentially have a 6-megalitre dam."

    "With a 30 per cent increase you could probably increase that to an 18-megalitre dam, and that would get a landholder through a two-year drought maintaining their stock water."

    The dry conditions persist across the Bega ValleyThe dry conditions persist across the Bega Valley  Ms Balas said having extra water stored could prevent farmers from having to completely destock and potentially let staff go.( ABC South East NSW: Adriane Reardon)

    Director of lobby group Dairy Connect Terry Toohey also welcomes the increase but fears it may not be enough.

    "It's one good step forward, it's still probably not considered enough to enable farmers to spend the money on more infrastructure to capture that water," he said.

    "To put dams in, it's not a cheap exercise to do."

    Mr Toohey said farms in high rainfall areas should be able to capture more water, particularly in wetter months. 

    "I understand we've got to work with the environment ... But ideally, 50 per cent would be more reasonable for high rainfall areas like the north coast," Mr Toohey said.

    Dairy farmer Terry Toohey kneeling in a crop.Dairy farmer Terry Toohey kneeling in a crop. Dairy Connect director and Casino farmer Terry Toohey says the NSW Government should increase harvestable rights to 50 per cent.(Supplied: Terry Toohey)Conservation council concerned

    Nature Conservation Council chief executive Chris Gambian said tripling coastal water harvesting rights puts coastal rivers, lakes and communities at risk.

    "I think a 300 per cent increase in the amount [of water] that can be taken from rainfall, really needs to be backed up with some scientific analysis," he said.

    "We need to know what the consequences of taking [that much] water from natural flows will be." 

    "My question [to the government]  is how do you ensure that you're not over-extracting from coastal rivers to a point where people and farmers downstream are going to have a worse situation than they've currently got?"

    Ms Pavey said landholders will have to consult their local councils and submit development applications to build more dams on their property.

    "If we have any concerns about the impact that would have on water flowing to town water supplies that's where those conversations will take place," she said.

    Ms Pavey said the state government will be undertaking detailed assessments of each individual coastal catchment over the next year to confirm the new limit is appropriate at a local level.

    Oxley MP Melinda PaveyOxley MP Melinda Pavey Melinda Pavey said the increase comes after an extensive review that included hydrological modelling and broad community consultation.(Supplied: Facebook)

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