The Forum > General Discussion > Pumping water inland expensive
Pumping water inland expensive
- Pages:
-
- Page 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- ...
- 19
- 20
- 21
-
- All
The National Forum | Donate | Your Account | On Line Opinion | Forum | Blogs | Polling | About |
Syndicate RSS/XML |
|
About Us :: Search :: Discuss :: Feedback :: Legals :: Privacy |
Every political cycle, a cavalcade of federal and state politicians dust off their Akubras, RMs and plaid shirts and head north, ready to pledge the nation's drought-ravaged farmers everything but actual rain.
The possibility of piping the water resources of northern Australia to quench thousands of thirsty southern agricultural paddocks has been floated by a litany of leaders keen to make use of the annual downpours of the tropical wet season.
But how plausible is the idea of pumping water from the Northern Territory down south to ease the dry soils of pastoral properties in Queensland, NSW and Western Australia? Or is it just a pipe dream?
According to scientists, water experts, and those who have been involved with some of the Top End's biggest-ever water infrastructure projects, the idea could work — in theory.
But no government would ever have the cash surplus needed to fund it, with experts warning any such a plan would cost billions and billions — even trillions — of taxpayer dollars.
And besides, is the notion that the NT has an endless supply of rainwater just a myth, anyway?
Project would sink billions
Although nearly 2 metres of rain falls each year in Darwin, the city does not have the infrastructure in place to capture enough of it and pump it out, Power and Water Corporation's Jethro Laidlaw said.
"We would need massive dams," he said.
"We already have Darwin River Dam, but we sort of need all of that for Darwin.
Despite the walls of water hitting Top End soil each year, "it's incredibly expensive to pump it to southern parts of Australia", CSIRO research scientist Andrew Ash said.
"Just the energy requirements on an operational scale means that it's very expensive, let alone the capital costs of building channels or pipelines to southern Australia."
** The rest of the article is at the link, interesting read. **
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-12-18/why-cant-top-end-pipe-water-south-assist-drought-stricken-states/10615440