This template should be substituted on the article talk page. NSW Office of Water

Mission Statement

edit

The Mission Statement of the Office of Water is to manage the State's surface water and groundwater resources as limited and precious resources for the immediate needs and for long-term social and economic well being of NSW communities while ensuring environmental sustainability.

History

edit
Department Name Start Date End date
Commissioner for Water Conservation and Irrigation 01 January 1913 19 April 1916
Water Conservation and Irrigation Commission [I] 01 June 1949 31 May 1949
Water Conservation and Irrigation Commission [II] 01 Jun 1949 29 April 1976
Water Resources Commission 30 April 1976 31 December 1986
Department of Water Resources 01 January 1987 06 April 1995
Department of Land and Water Conservation 06 April 1995 02 April 2003
Department of Sustainable Natural Resources 02 April 2003 01 July 2003
Department of Infrastructure, Planning and Natural Resources 01 July 2003 29 August 2005
Department of Natural Resources 29 August 2005 27 April 2007
Department of Water and Energy 27 April 2007 01 July 2009
NSW Office of Water 01 July 2009

[1]

What We Do

edit

The NSW Office of Water (NOW), a department in the Government of New South Wales, is responsible for leading policy and reform in sustainable water management in both rural and urban settings in the state of New South Wales (NSW), Australia. It is the lead agency working with rural and urban water utilities, government agencies, farmers, industry, business, environment groups and consumers to achieve a secure and sustainable allocation of water between all users.

The NSW Office of Water is also responsible for ensuring NSW meets its commitments under the National Water Initiative, which is the peak national water reform policy document in Australia.

The NSW Office of Water reports to the NSW Government on water policy and the administration of key water management legislation, including the Water Management Act 2000, Water Act 1912, and the Hawkesbury-Nepean River Act 2009.

The NSW Office of Water is charged with balancing the needs of all water users, particularly during challenging times such as droughts and a future of probable lower water availability as a result of climate variability. Conversely, the NSW Office of Water is responsible for the management of significant flood events – many such events often traverse three states as they move through the Murray-Darling Basin.

Water Sharing Plans

edit

To meet and balance the many competing needs for water resources, the NSW Office of Water has developed and implemented statutory water sharing plans that seek to ensure available surface and groundwater resources are shared equitably between towns and cities, the environment, irrigation, stock and domestic needs and industry. To date, water sharing plans cover over 90 per cent of water extracted across the state, with plans covering the remaining areas currently under various phases of development.

The NSW Office of Water also manages the Metropolitan Water Plan for Greater Sydney. This plan aims to deliver secure and sustainable water supplies for the benefit of the 4.5 million people, businesses and major rivers of the Greater Metropolitan region. The Office also reviews and facilitates water recycling and water industry competition projects.

Our Information

edit

NOW is also the custodian of large scale hydrologic water planning models which cover major NSW surface and groundwater sources. These models are used in the development of water sharing plans, as well as to meet interstate obligations for river salinity and water extraction limits.

Much of NSW water data and information on flows and river levels, groundwater levels, water use, water quality, and the condition of aquatic ecosystems is collected and monitored by the NSW Office of Water. NOW’s information on river flow throughout NSW is provided in real-time to the public and is used by bodies such as the Bureau of Meterology and the State Emergency Services in times of flood.

Water Licencing

edit

One of the main functions of NOW is the licensing of water extraction and works, ensuring water users comply with licensing conditions and facilitating the water market both within NSW and into the neighbouring states of Victoria and South Australia.

Water Management

edit

NOW is also the NSW lead agency for the implementation of a number of joint water savings initiatives with the national government, including the Great Artesian Basin Sustainability Initiative (NSW Cap and Pipe the Bores Program), Pipeline NSW, National Water Commission groundwater projects, and projects under the Bureau of Meteorology (BoM) Modernisation Fund – a project to enhance hydrologic monitoring systems and data to support a National Water Information program.

Water Supply - Urban

edit

NOW manages the NSW Government’s Country Towns Water Supply and Sewerage Program which is a major State Government initiative. Through it NOW provides leadership, guidance, and expertise in planning and in the management, operation and maintenance of the water supply and sewerage services in non-metropolitan NSW.

NOW also works closely with water utilities and local government to ensure all NSW communities have a reliable, sustainable, efficient and well managed urban water supply and sewerage services.

NOW also provides emergency drought assistance – both technical and financial – to water utilities to meet the Government’s commitment that no town runs out of water. This includes developing supplementary or alternative water sources, building pipelines and water carting.

The implementation of the NSW Government’s $200 million Aboriginal Communities Water and Sewerage Program is managed by NOW. This program provides technical and financial support to 61 discrete Aboriginal communities to ensure their water and sewerage services meet the standards expected in the wider community.

Groundwater

edit

NOW manages the operation of a Groundwater Drilling Unit which is a commercial, cost-recovered business. NOW also manages the operation and maintenance of a number of salt interception schemes in partnership with the Murray-Darling Basin Authority and private companies.

edit

http://www.water.nsw.gov.au
http://www.waterforlife.nsw.gov.au
http://www.ohn.nsw.gov.au
http://www.statewater.com.au

References

edit

The Water Act, 1912 (Act no. 44 1912)
The Irrigation Act, 1912 (Act No. 73 1912)
The Irrigation (Amendment) Act, 1916, (Act No.22 1916)
The Conservation Authority of New South Wales Act, 1949 (Act No.8 1949)
The Water Resources Commission Act, 1976 (Act No.34 1976)
The Water Administration Act, 1986 (Act No. 195 1986)
The Water Management Act 2000 (Act no. 96 2000)
NSW Groundwater Policy Framework Document DLWC 1997 ISBN: 0731303334
NSW Guidelines for greywater reuse in sewered, single household residential premises - DWE May 2008 ISBN: 0975751689
Water Industry Competition (General) Regulation 2008. Regulatory Impact Statement - DWE April 2008 ISBN: 9780734752208
NSW strategic water information and monitoring plan - final report - NOW December 2009 ISBN: 978 1 921546 95 2
NSW strategic water information and monitoring plan - water inventory and observation networks in NSW - NOW December 2009 ISBN: 978 1 921546 94 5
The Murray River Algal Bloom Evaluation and recommendations for the future management of major outbreaks - NOW December 2009 ISBN: 978 0 7313 3934 1
Management of Menindee Lakes releases to South Australia - NOW February 2010 ISBN: 978 0 7313 3947 1
Macro water sharing plans - the approach for unregulated rivers A report to assist community consultation - NOW February 2010 ISBN: 978 0 7313 3917 4
Guidelines for groundwater sharing plan report cards - NOW December 2010 ISBN: 978 0 7313 3447 6
NOW Compliance Policy ISBN: 978 1 74263 089 2
Thirlmere Lakes groundwater assessment - NOW December 2010 ISBN: 978 0 7313 3467 4
Monitoring economic and social changes in NSW water sharing plan areas. Irrigators' survey 2009 - covering plans commenced since 2004 and currently under development - NOW June 2010 ISBN: 978 1 74263 062 5
Snowy River recovery: Snowy flow response monitoring and modelling - ecological response to the Spring 2010 environmental flow release to the Snowy River below Jindabyne - NOW November 2010 ISBN: 978 1 74263 107 3
Environmental flow response and socio-economic monitoring. North Coast - progress report 2009 - NOW March 2011 ISBN: 978 1 742 631 653
Environmental flow response and socio-economic monitoring. Border Rivers - progress report 2009 - NOW March 2011 ISBN: 978 1 742 631 646

  1. ^ www.records.nsw.gov.au



The latest Annual Report [1]

NOW waterboy 05:25, 12 April 2011 (UTC) NOW waterboy 04:17, 18 April 2011 (UTC) NOW waterboy 05:10, 21 April 2011 (UTC) NOW waterboy 04:54, 28 April 2011 (UTC) NOW waterboy 06:01, 28 April 2011 (UTC)