FURTHER CONSULTATION ON ACCREDITATION UNDER WATER CHARGE RULES


Environmental Panorama
International
September of 2009


17 September 2009
Minister for Climate Change and Water, Senator Penny Wong, today announced that she has asked the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) to provide further advice on rules for accreditation as part of the water infrastructure charge rules.

The Minister publicly released the ACCC's advice, including draft rules, on the water infrastructure charge rules in July. The ACCC recommends that a single regulator (the ACCC) undertake all price determinations across the Basin under the water charge rules.

“Some stakeholders have indicated that they would like the opportunity to have state regulators accredited to carry out determinations under the water charge rules,” Senator Wong said.

“In response to these concerns, I have decided to ask the ACCC to consult and provide further advice on rules that provide for accreditation. Any accreditation model will need to achieve the Basin water charging objectives and principles of the Water Act 2007.

“The ACCC's consultation process will be critical in delivering the future water charging arrangements across the Basin and I strongly urge all stakeholders to participate.

“I will make my decision on the water infrastructure charge rules, including accreditation arrangements, once I receive further advice from the ACCC.”

Senator Wong has asked the ACCC to provide further advice by February 2010.

More information about the water charge rules can be found on the ACCC website: www.accc.gov.au .

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Study of climate change impacts on Tasmanian east coast rock lobster fishery

Media release
PW 266/09
15 September 2009
Minister for Climate Change and Water, Senator Penny Wong, today released a case study report on the vulnerability and adaptive capacity of Tasmania's east coast rock lobster fishery system to climate change.

The report - East coast Tasmanian rock lobster fishery - vulnerability to climate change impacts and adaptation response options - predicts future climate change impacts on the system and assesses the capacity of rock lobster fishers to adapt to predicted climate impacts.

It identifies a range of possible adaptation responses available to resource users and managers on the east coast of Tasmania - an area already experiencing the impacts of climate change.

"Climate change is already having an impact on species, habitats, and ecological communities in the area and this is expected to continue in the future, impacting on dependent industries, such as the rock lobster industry,'' Senator Wong said.

"The east coast of Tasmania has experienced warming over the last few decades at three to four times the global average and this has been impacting catches for a considerable period."

The team - led by Dr Gretta Pecl of the Tasmanian Aquaculture and Fisheries Institute - included researchers from the University of Tasmania, CSIRO Climate Adaptation Flagship, Tasmanian Department of Primary Industries and Water, University of Washington.

"The report provides industry and government with longer term horizons to plan adaptation and management and demonstrates how actions today should consider climate change projections," Professor Colin Buxton, Director of the Tasmanian Aquaculture and Fisheries Institute, said.

Tasmanian Rock Lobster Fishermen's Association chief executive officer Rodney Treloggen said industry involvement in the project had raised awareness of the significance of climate change to the industry, and would encourage the industry to be more proactive.

"A well informed industry will be more proactive and will therefore more effectively manage the impacts of climate change, compared with an industry that ignores the threat," Mr Treloggen said.

The report is available at www.climatechange.gov.au .

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$1.5 million to assess climate change impacts on groundwater

Media release
2 September 2009
PW 255/09
The Rudd Government will provide $1.5 million for a project to help water managers better understand the expected impacts of climate change on Australian groundwater resources.

Minister for Climate Change and Water, Senator Penny Wong, made the announcement in Griffith with Parliamentary Secretary for Water, Dr Mike Kelly.

"Australia faces major challenges in securing our water supplies in the face of a drying climate and rising demand for water," Senator Wong said.

"The Rudd Government is working to meet these challenges through our $12.9 billion Water for the Future Program. Key priorities under Water for the Future are taking action on climate change, securing our water supplies, using water wisely and supporting healthy rivers.

"As reduced water availability increases pressure on both surface water and groundwater resources, we need better information on how much water Australia's groundwater systems can provide.

"This knowledge is crucial to helping us plan and make decisions about our water resources."

The project will investigate how climate change is expected to affect rainfall, along with water losses through evaporation and water use by plants. It will then determine the impact of these factors on groundwater recharge and base flows to water systems at a regional level.

Dr Kelly said the project would build upon the sustainable yields work undertaken by the CSIRO in the Murray-Darling Basin, Northern Australia, South West Western Australia and Tasmania.

"Importantly, the investigations in the Murray-Darling Basin will provide up-to-date information to assist the Murray-Darling Basin Authority in its preparation of the new Basin Plan," Dr Kelly said.

To be implemented from 2011, the Basin Plan will include a new, scientifically-based, sustainable limit on the use of both surface water and groundwater in the Basin.

The project announced today was initiated by the National Water Commission to help integrate climate change adaptation into groundwater planning and management. More information is available at www.nwc.gov.au

Funding was provided under the National Groundwater Action Plan, which is investing in projects to improve groundwater knowledge and guide reforms agreed to under the National Water Initiative.

 
 

Source: Australian - Department of the Environment and Heritage
Australian Alps National Park
Australian Antarctic Division
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