| All
these dams share a common thread of optimism, the hope that the
provision of a dependable water supply would somehow “drought-proof”
the state and facilitate enhanced agriculture and easier living.
To many who share this dream that dams equate to a certainty of
water supply, the present crisis is wholly attributable to our not
having added to our portfolio of existing dams.
Now,
four decades on, it might be as well to reflect on the reality.
South
East Queensland gets nightly updates of the levels of the major
domestic storages. Somerset, Wivenhoe and North Pine Dams are collectively
at around 29%. These figures look almost respectable compared to
those previously mentioned, but anxiety about their low levels has
lead to severe restrictions.
Property
owners on the shores of Somerset Dam speak of having to regularly
extend their fences out into what had been dam, of their cattle
now grazing on land recently exposed and now covered in grass.
The
simple fact is that our dams are failing us.
It’s
not the engineers’ fault. They built dams that held back water
when it rained, but there’s that other variable that is well
out of the control of every engineer, and also, as he has repeatedly
rued, our Premier.“I can’t make it
rain,” says Peter Beattie.
What
he could do, though, is recognize that our water crisis comes from
an almost total reliance on dams for water supply. Dams in the area
of greatest population growth aren’t in fact the lowest. Changing
rainfall patterns mean that Moogerah is getting fewer of the storms
that gave it both its name and its desirability as a dam-site.
Instead,
his assessment of the situation is that if our existing dams aren’t
holding enough water, then plainly we need more of them………
if your wallet doesn’t contain much money, then obviously
you need more wallets.
His
newly announced additions include a mega-dam at Traveston across
the Mary River, a smaller dam at Wyaralong across Teviot Brook near
Boonah and raising of both Borumba and Hinze dams and a few other
storages as well.
It’s
an assessment he hopes will be shared by voters, at least those
who still share that axiomatic “dam equals more water”
connection. Many though, are questioning how dams that can’t
possibly begin to fill until at least 2011 will be any use at all
in a crisis that could well crunch in just two years time if significant
rains don’t fall.
The
Beattie government’s newest, the Paradise Dam that drowns
the Burnett River, northwest of Childers, was recently named in
an international list of failed dams. It was hoped that after the
wall was completed last year, the dam would fill quickly but it
is currently at only 15%. It is an expensive fulfillment (no pun
intended) of an electoral promise for which we’ll still be
paying years hence.
You
can understand why there’s far more outcry about the Mary
and Wyaralong Dams than from just those who stand to be displaced.
Councils the length of the Mary have spoken out in opposition, and
rural groups, environmentalists and church groups have added a long
list of concerns.
Many
are comparing Premier Beattie’s approach and vision to that
of Joh Bjelke-Petersen.
Making
the long walk, down through the cracked mud toward the receding
shoreline of Bjelke-Petersen Dam, you can almost feel the vision
splendid evaporating as surely as the dam’s contents.
While
many farmers we encountered were making the most of the opportunity
to excavate and deepen their dams in anticipation of eventual rain,
no such activity was taking place in the bigger dams. It seemed
it was simply easier to just build a new one.
At
a time when most water authorities are diversifying their supply
options, shouldn’t a first priority be reflecting on the success
of the status quo?
The
red dots tell the story.
Without
good run-off rain, a dam is just an expensive wall.
It’s
time we faced the fact that our dams aren’t working.
by
Ian Mackay.
The
writer is a teacher, poet and environmentalist from the Mary Valley.
For the last ten years he has been President of the Conondale Range
Committee, one of the Sunshine Coast’s longest serving environment
groups.
Sunwater
info comes from www.sunwater.com.au |