Wednesday 14 October 2009

Australian National Water Week begins on 18 October 2009 with a less than subtle hint on raiding coastal rivers: ACVP


From A Clarence Valley Protest yesterday:

Australian National Water Week begins on 18 October 2009 with a less than subtle hint on raiding coastal rivers

National Water Week is almost upon us and it is hard not to be a bit suspicious of this particular event as it seems to be primarily pushing the barrow of the big water utility companies.

After all, the week is co-sponsored by the 40 year-old Australian Water Association which identifies itself as Australia's peak water industry body, having the largest – and most broadly based – membership, connecting professionals around the country and across all water-related disciplines. AWA has over 4,000 individual, and 700 corporate members nationally.

Created water supplies of course mean money to many of these companies and not just as sources of drinking/agricultural water.

The multinational Maunsell AECOM which currently employs the AWA president Peter Robinson is in the business of:

  • Land, sea and air transportation
  • Hydro and geothermal power generation, transmission and distribution
  • Mining and heavy industry
  • Natural resource management and rehabilitation
  • Buildings, infrastructure construction and management

The National Water Week website contains a resource page which should ring alarm bells for the NSW North Coast as it implies that a high percentage of freshwater could be safely diverted inland from coastal rivers and specifically mentions the Clarence River in Turning back rivers inland.

Definitely not a good look for National Water Week. Nor is it one that inspires confidence that the other co-sponsor, the Federal Government, really does understand the reality of coastal living or how hard local councils and communities work towards achieving water sustainability, though remedial water work on river systems and imposing permanent mandatory water restrictions in the Clarence Valley and voluntary permanent water saving measures in the Richmond and Tweed Valleys.

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