{"id":67504,"date":"2023-09-03T22:35:35","date_gmt":"2023-09-03T22:35:35","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/likecelebwn.com\/?p=67504"},"modified":"2023-09-03T22:35:35","modified_gmt":"2023-09-03T22:35:35","slug":"sydneys-running-out-of-water-and-we-havent-been-paying-attention","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/likecelebwn.com\/lifestyle\/sydneys-running-out-of-water-and-we-havent-been-paying-attention\/","title":{"rendered":"Sydney\u2019s running out of water, and we haven\u2019t been paying attention"},"content":{"rendered":"
Add articles to your saved list and come back to them any time.<\/p>\n
As summer draws nearer, so too are our plans to spend time at the beach or by a pool. But water experts are getting increasingly nervous about a problem that\u2019s been lying dormant for years: our water supply is running out.<\/p>\n
And it seems the problem will get worse as climate change triggers more intense and frequent extreme weather, and our population booms.<\/p>\n
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Sydney might not have enough water in the coming years as it battles climate change and population growth.<\/span>Credit: <\/span>Nick Moir<\/cite><\/p>\n Dr Jamie Pittock, a flooding and climate change expert at Australian National University, says governments and water supply agencies haven\u2019t kept as close an eye on the underlying issue as they needed to. In turn, alternative water sources haven\u2019t been developed as quickly.<\/p>\n \u201cAnything in the water-management space is expensive, and governments are reluctant to do something radically new or expensive in this field unless they have to,\u201d he said. \u201cBut with ongoing climate change, we are going to have to get much better at managing under conditions of uncertainty and change.\u201d<\/p>\n The problem is that to fill its dams, Sydney relies heavily on rainwater, which is then used for drinking water. But as these dry up, our water supply dwindles. Add the impacts of climate change and more extreme fires, droughts and floods \u2013 and water supply becomes a lot less reliable.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n After three years of heavy rain, Warragamba Dam is at 95 per cent capacity \u2013 but can its water supply last the coming hot weather?<\/span>Credit: <\/span>Nick Moir<\/cite><\/p>\n The Greater Sydney Water strategy, published in 2021, shows by 2060, the city\u2019s water needs will increase by 250 gigalitres of drinking water per year \u2013 that\u2019s equivalent to about half the volume of Sydney Harbour.<\/p>\n But we\u2019re unlikely to have enough water to meet demand, says Stuart Khan, a professor at the University of NSW and on the Independent Metropolitan Water Advisory Panel.<\/p>\n \u201cOur demands already exceed our supply. We haven\u2019t done enough,\u201d he says.<\/p>\n The report notes Sydney will need to find alternative sources that don\u2019t rely on rainfall, ensure urban environments can better absorb water, and protect waterways and the natural environment.<\/p>\n The first is one of our biggest challenges. Sydney gets most of its drinking water from dams, with the Warragamba Dam supplying 80 per cent. Sydney\u2019s dams are at 92 per cent storage capacity thanks to three years of heavy rainfall.<\/p>\n But pockets of NSW are showing signs of drought, and it won\u2019t take long for this supply to wane. Already, 8.4 per cent of the state is drought affected, including regions like Grafton and Casino.<\/p>\n During the 2018-2020 drought, Sydney\u2019s total water storage dropped from just above 80 per cent capacity to 40 per cent. Khan says we could see this again in future droughts.<\/p>\n \u201cTrying to store enough water hasn\u2019t worked for us. Storing water can be great, for getting us through seasons \u2013 from a few wet years to a few dry years \u2013 but the whole thing falls apart when there are many dry years,\u201d Khan says.<\/p>\n In short, the way Sydney\u2019s water system is designed means we won\u2019t have enough water.<\/p>\n \u201cWe need to build more desalination plants, which are great for supplying water to coastal areas, but we need to also be thinking about how to get water to our most increasing demand areas, which will be in western Sydney. That will be the challenge. We can\u2019t pump water from the coast to western Sydney: it would have to go under roads, under an entire city. That is simply not a realistic option.\u201d<\/p>\n Globally, the year has already been marked by extremely high temperatures, likely to be accelerated by a looming El Nino and climate change. With summer just around the corner, authorities will be bracing for difficult conditions.<\/p>\n Sydney has few alternative water sources. There\u2019s a desalination plant in the south that turns salt water into fresh water, which produces about 15 per cent of our drinking supply. A Sydney Water spokesperson said it was supplying more water from the desalination plant under new operating rules, boosting supply by an additional 20,000 million litres on average.<\/p>\n The plant has the capacity to be scaled up and produce more water \u2013 but it\u2019s not enough.<\/p>\n Pittock says Sydney has been lucky its dam supply has supported it for so many years. Cities like Perth and Melbourne have been forced years ago to diversify.<\/p>\n \u201cNow it is Sydney\u2019s turn, and it is going to be a challenge,\u201d he says.<\/p>\n Another option is turning stormwater and sewage into clean water. Many cities do this, including Singapore. By 2060, the Asian city anticipates 85 per cent of its water demand will be met by sewage water and desalination. California is exploring plans to do the same.<\/p>\n \u201cWe need to think more broadly about how we diversify beyond seawater desalination,\u201d Khan says. \u201cWhen we have a drought and there is no rain, we suffer directly. The dams stop filling up and there are water restrictions, and we run out of water. It\u2019s a cycle Sydney will continue until there\u2019s increased water supply.\u201d<\/p>\n Dr Ian Wright, who lectures in water science and management at Western Sydney University, says while pockets of Sydney use treated sewage water, there\u2019s been no real urgency to adopt the method widely.<\/p>\n He adds that our obsession with using clean water for everything \u2013 like cleaning the car or watering the garden \u2013 could be contributing to overuse. Using grey water \u2013 water from the shower or washing machines \u2013 could be a good example of recycling water.<\/p>\n There has been a shift towards drier conditions across the southwest and southeast of Australia, with more years recording below-average rainfall. For example, between April and October, there has been a decline in about 15 per cent of rainfall since 1970 for the region. Meanwhile, it\u2019s getting hotter, which means rain evaporates quickly rather than flowing into the catchment.<\/p>\n This poses issues for a city heavily reliant on rainfall for its water supply.<\/p>\n After three years of wet weather, planning for a drought seems odd \u2013 but Wright says it\u2019s precisely what we should be doing. \u201cWe need to be using this time to be building and improve our recycling and desalination,\u201d he says. \u201c[Only] when it gets dry do we start to panic.\u201d<\/p>\n A three-year audit of the city\u2019s water supply found it is unlikely to remain healthy, with climate change posing a massive risk to supply. The audit, undertaken by Eco Logical Australia and Restore Environmental Consultants for NSW Minister for Water Rose Jackson, looked at the health of the catchment between 2019 and 2022.<\/p>\n The report noted that while some areas were in good health, many featured degraded landscapes and wetlands, with poor vegetation, pollution and poor water quality.<\/p>\n It also noted that it was unlikely good land management practices and pollution regulation would maintain Sydney\u2019s drinking water catchment health, unless substantial effort was made to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and limit climate change impacts.<\/p>\n Jackson said the government was not only committed to shoring up water supply but also addressing climate change and the environment.<\/em><\/p>\n She said that\u2019s why as of next year, a new government department, to be known as the Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water, would focus solely on this area. <\/em><\/p>\n \u201cThe former government set us on a path that has been hard to wind back. After a decade of neglect and inaction, we are working fast to address these issues and remain committed to meeting our net zero targets, which we will also establish in law,\u201d she said.<\/p>\n \u201cWe know our regional communities always bear the brunt of devastating droughts and it is crucial they are given the resources and infrastructure to improve water security at the local level to ensure they can survive dry times.\u201d<\/p>\n Despite the challenges, Pittock\u2019s hopeful more water resources will be found.<\/p>\n \u201cWe have to. There is no alternative. The state government is focused on the fact that allowing a city to run out of water is not a strategy,\u201d he says.<\/em><\/p>\n Get to the heart of what\u2019s happening with climate change and the environment. Our fortnightly Environment newsletter brings you the news, the issues and the solutions. Sign up here.<\/strong><\/em><\/p>\nTurning on the tap to other solutions<\/h3>\n
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