The 4350water Blog highlights some of the issues relating to proposals for potable reuse in Toowoomba and South East Qld. 4350water blog looks at related political issues as well.

Tuesday, January 31, 2006

More recycled water problems - this time in LA ...

Traces Of Prescription Drugs Found In LA Recycled Water

January 30, 2006

LOS ANGELES -- Water quality officials have found traces of resilient prescription drugs in waste water that has been filtered and recycled into a Southern California aquifer for eventual use as drinking water, but the amounts are so small that the health effects are unclear, the Los Angeles Times reported Monday.

Drugs including antibiotics, antipsychotics, birth-control hormones, Viagra and Valium routinely turn up in wastewater all over the world because people flush them down their toilets.

But medications have also ended up in Los Angeles County's water supplies because of the region's aggressive efforts to turn treated sewage into drinking water.

The amounts of the drugs may be small and scientists suspect there is little or no human danger. But they say no one knows if there are health hazards from ingesting small doses of drugs continuously over a lifetime.

See comments for more excerpts from the article.

Also see - Traces of drugs in recycled water.

Truth exposed on Water Futures project ...

From today's Chronicle:

Toowoomba was always intended to be the lab rat city for Australia:

"Toowoomba, it appears, was to be the guinea pig of the nation before it could be introduced to Brisbane, Sydney and the Gold Coast. But the results from the experiment have not been positive so far. "

Politicians against the project:

"In the six months since the Water Futures project was formally announced, Member for Groom Ian Macfarlane has withdrawn his support and all Toowoomba's local Nationals MPs, as well as some representing areas downstream, have indicated their opposition."

Regional customers against the project:

"Regional customer councils, such as Jondaryan Shire Council, have also expressed resentment at not being included in the decision-making process and have formed their own group to investigate regional alternatives to recycling. "

See - Truth starts to come out.

Can the Mayor still deny there is no opposition to her controversial recycled sewage project?

Voters abandon Beattie ...

How will Premier Beattie deal with the recycled water for drinking question when faced with voters abandoning him?

From The Australian:

VOTERS are ready to punish the Beattie Government over Queensland's health crisis.

Leaked internal research shows that a majority of voters in marginal seats will vent their fury at the Labor Government at the next state election.

While Premier Peter Beattie will try to calm nervous backbenchers at a caucus retreat this week, the research reveals voters are ready to give Opposition Leader Lawrence Springborg a go and believe the Coalition is best placed to solve problems with the public hospital system.

Mr Beattie's leadership is under a cloud and his hopes of a fourth term in power are fading, with only 30 per cent of marginal seat voters believing he deserves to stay on as Premier.

The confidential Labor research, undertaken before Christmas, reveals slightly more than 50 per cent of voters want to deliver a protest vote against Labor at the next election.

With the election only a year away, and 11 seats with margins of less than 5 per cent, Mr Beattie faces an uphill battle to regain support in knife-edge seats, where a swing of 7.3 per cent would leave Labor unable to govern in its own right.

The research shows a majority of voters believe Labor has neglected essential services -- once regarded as the party's strength -- and not focused enough on infrastructure at a time when Queensland is experiencing rapid population growth.

See - Voters abandoning Beattie.

Turnbull does U-turn on using recycled water for drinking ...

Large headline in today's Chronicle:

Turnbull does U-turn on using recycled water for drinking

Detailed article on the apparent about face by Malcolm Turnbull on using recycled water for drinking.

And Deputy Mayor Ramia, after being jubilant at Mr Turnbull's appointment is now worried.

As with any politician, there are two questions to ask - (1) are you in favour of recycling? and (2) are you in favour of using recycled water for drinking?

Some excerpts:

A recent statement shows Mr Turnbull's revised opinion in which he declares his support of the method of recycling sewage but rejects that the cleaned up water should be added to a city's drinking supply.

"From a practical point of view there is simply no need to introduce recycled water into the potable water system," he said.

"There are ample uses for recycled water: industrial, parks, gardens, street cleaning and above all, replenishing the stream flows of our rivers and thereby replacing the potable water currently released into them."

Toowoomba City Council water portfolio chair Joe Ramia said this statement worried him, particularly as Mr Turnbull was last Friday sworn in to his new position and will be working closely with the man who will decide whether to grant funding to Toowoomba's Water Futures sewage recycling proposal.

Mr Turnbull said it was up to individual communities like Toowoomba to decide whether or not they wanted to drink recycled water.

"I think Malcolm Turnbull has had a change of heart," Cr Ramia said, admitting his disappointment. "At the end of the day it does worry me.

"I was ecstatic when I found out he was appointed (to the position of parliamentary secretary to the Prime Minister, responsible for water policy)," Cr Ramia said.

"I'm not as ecstatic now, but I'd still rather see him in the job than someone who doesn't support recycling at all."

See the full article - Cr Ramia now disappointed.

Water Services Association position paper ...

Interesting position paper by the Water Services Association of Australia dated October 2005 - "Testing the Water".

The position paper does not advocate the use of recycled water other than for non-drinking purposes.

See - WSAA position paper.

Monday, January 30, 2006

Acland Coal's draft EIS released ...

Acland Coal has released its draft Environmental Impact Statement for its Stage 2 expansion project.

It makes interesting reading, particularly in relation to how much water it will use.

Public submissions are due by 10 March 2006.

See - Acland Coal draft EIS.

See - Acland Coal ad.

PM fails to clarify recycled water for drinking issue ...

The Prime Minister was interviewed on radio today. He made certain comments regarding the Sydney desalination debate but failed to clarify whether he believes in recycled water for drinking ...

LAWS: This desalination remains a major issue, I've kept half an eye on it, particularly in the Sydney area. Are you going to apply a bit of pressure to the Iemma Government in the hope that they might change their minds on the Kurnell desalination plant?

PRIME MINISTER:Well I don't think desalination is a good option for Sydney, I don't.

LAWS:Well what is the other one?

PRIME MINISTER: I think recycling myself. I would expect in his new role as my Parliamentary Secretary, and having responsibility particularly for water matters, Malcolm Turnbull will have something to say over the month ahead about this issue.

Predominantly the argument of course in New South Wales and in Sydney has to be carried by the Opposition because that is predominantly a state matter; although the Federal Government does have a view and you will increasingly hear that Federal Government view because water is a national issue as well as a local issue.

See - PM comments.

Saturday, January 28, 2006

Mistakes can and do happen ...

From SIGNONSANDIEGO NEWS SERVICES

3.5 million gallons of treated wastewater spills

January 27, 2006

SAN DIEGO – Broken valves caused the discharge into San Diego's storm drain system of about 3.5 million gallons of reclaimed water, which may have ended up in the Los Penasquitos Lagoon, city officials said Friday.

The spill likely started on Monday due to problems with three pressure release valves in Scripps Ranch that are part of the city's water reclamation system, according to Mayor Jerry Sanders' office.

Water Department officials believe the problem began after recycled water system pump motors were restarted, according to the mayor's office.

The spill was noticed after the city of Poway, which buys reclaimed water from San Diego for irrigation purposes, notified the Water Department that it wasn't getting the amount it should have been receiving. [So they noticed it before the authorities responsible for the water did!]

The Regional Water Quality Control Board, San Diego County Department of Environmental Health, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and California Department of Fish and Game are working to determine the impact of the spill, according to Sanders' office.

Repairs on the pressure release valves, located near Scripps Westview and Scripps Lake Drive, are under way.

Reclaimed water is wastewater that has been treated and is commonly used to irrigate golf courses, parks and roadsides.

See - Note to TCC - mistakes do happen.

Ratepayers face water price hike ...

The Beattie government goes into crisis mode on water.

Why is it that Brisbane is selling water to the Gold Coast when Hinze Dam is at over 85% capacity?

From the Courier Mail

Ratepayers face water price hike

28jan06

LOCAL Government water charges could rise by up to $185 a year per ratepayer under a $3 billion emergency water package announced yesterday.

Local councils must contribute up to $1 billion of the package aimed at stopping southeast Queensland running out of water in as little as three years.

Emergency measures outlined yesterday include mandatory rainwater tanks on all new homes, a Gold Coast desalination plant and re-commissioning of old water resources.

Natural Resources and Mines Minister Henry Palaszczuk said the State Government would fund about $2 billion of new infrastructure but a further $1 billion must come from water users.

Mr Palaszczuk said that, unless money from a $2 billion Federal Government Australian Water Fund was made available to local councils, water users would be forced to pay.

"Ultimately, (higher water charges) probably will occur, but not in the short term," he said.

Local Government Association acting executive director Greg Hoffman said the cost burden to ratepayers would total about $185 a year for five years if distributed equally among the 18 southeast Queensland councils.

Mr Hoffman said the $185 figure was an estimate because water costs varied depending on consumption levels and differences between domestic, industrial and commercial use.

The new measures have already sparked criticism. The Property Council of Australia has criticised the cost burden of compulsory water tanks and said the jury was still out on the benefits of desalination.

The threat of extra costs for ratepayers has opened the door for squabbling between councils over who should foot the bill.

Tight water restrictions have already caused disputes in council areas where there is no water shortage.

But Brisbane Lord Mayor – and chair of the South East Queensland Council of Mayors – Campbell Newman, said immediate action was needed to avert a crisis.

"All governments have their commitments – what I'm urging all partners to do is to get on with it," he said.

Mr Palaszczuk said the State Government's strategy did not include new dams.

"There is already a trillion litres of unused water storage capacity," Mr Palaszczuk said.

Short-term solutions in the interim report include:

• Water restrictions, pressure reduction and leakage management.

• Recommissioning Enoggera Dam and Lake Manchester.

• Identifying groundwater in Brisbane for emergency supplies.

• Collecting wastewater from Brisbane and Ipswich to supply to industry.

• Construction of Cedar Grove Weir on the Logan River and Mary River Weir for Gympie and Noosa.

• Mandating rainwater tanks in new homes for toilet and outdoor use.

• Saving 50 to 75 megalitres a day by reducing water system pressure and leakage, through a $20 million state subsidy.

Long-term solutions included raising the Hinze and Wivenhoe, Wyaralong dams and the re-commissioning of Ewen Maddock Dam.

The final report is expected at the end of 2006.

SEQ Water has blamed an unpredictable climate shift on the drying dams.

It said that, if the area's major dams receive minimum recorded inflows, "the region has about three years of supply remaining".

The situation is made more critical by the fact that, by 2026, the population of southeast Queensland is expected to top 3.7 million, more than twice the population in 1985.

Meanwhile, Mr Palaszczuk and Cr Newman congratulated residents for saving more than 50 billion litres of water since water restrictions came in to effect last May.

Demand is down this month about 30 per cent over previous years.

But water storage levels at Wivenhoe, Somerset and North Pine dams are still only a third full because major rain in the catchment has been slight over the past five years.


See - Time for water solutions.

Toowoomba City Council tries to be water smart ...








From the Council's website:

All Council owned buildings and public facilities are having their own makeover with single flush toilets replaced by dual flush models, urinals fitted with sensor flush units, installation of AAA shower roses, and flow controlled taps.

Check for the AAA sticker.


The Council is copping a lot of flak over its recycled sewage proposal - but they get a tick in the sensible box for initiatives like this.

See - Sensible TCC decision.

Friday, January 27, 2006

Water Futures - there are no other options ...

Look at the people and groups saying there are other options for sourcing Toowoomba's water needs which should be considered.

For example:

Minister Ian Macfarlane:

"I cannot support the proposal as it stands until all of these unresolved issues are properly addressed, detailed explanations on costings and technology made public, and all options fully investigated and costed."

"I have also been told by the Department of Natural Resources, Queensland Gas and farmers that alternative water supply opportunities exist."

"I support the call for a detailed, independent audit of all the alternatives by an organisation or body independent of government, council and farmers."

Councillor Shelton:

"I think it will be hard to sell drinking recycled sewage when 27,000 megalitres of proven, safe yield of potable water is available within kilometres of the city."

MP Ray Hopper:

"There are other ways of providing water to Toowoomba."

MP Mike Horan:

"I have real concerns that there are other alternatives which should be looked at first."

MP Stuart Copeland:

"It's a little disappointing because some of the statements in here [the DNR report] make it look more like justifying the need to support the drinking of recycled water or justifying the need to get money from the national water initiative than looking at the alternatives for securing the supply of water to Toowoomba."

"This document seems to be more about justifying the need to drink recycled water than it is about realistically looking at alternatives. That is a real shame."

Commerce Qld:

“A Regional Water Plan looking at all alternatives is crucial for the overall benefit of the region."

Toowoomba Chamber of Commerce:

"The Mayor (Dianne Thorley) keeps saying there are no other options," Mr Andersen said. "But there are."


And then there's the Mayor:

"There are no other options." "If you don't like it, drink bottled water."

Makes you think ...

Dams to ease crisis ...

From the Australian:

January 26, 2006

THE Queensland Government is preparing to start work on another small dam in the state's southeast, along with a water recycling dam for one of the region's major power stations, as population growth and the drought point to the prospect of dry times.

The Government last year opened Paradise Dam near Bundaberg - the first dam to be built in Australia since 1994 - and Premier Peter Beattie yesterday announced that work had started on Cedar Grove Weir at Jimboomba, south of Brisbane, as well as a scheme to pipe recycled water to Swanbank Power station, west of Brisbane.

See -Dams to ease crisis.

Goulburn Mulrawee Council consults the community ...

Another proactive council surveying residents' views on infrastructure and service.

See - Community consultation.

Water Futures project forced on an unreceptive community ...

Article in the Toowoomba Chronicle on 27 January highlights the concerns of the Toowoomba Chamber of Commerce regarding the recycled water project.

Some excerpts (with annotations):

"Toowoomba Chamber of Commerce president Ian Andersen said the group of regional mayors [apparently Toowoomba's mayor generally refuses to attend these meetings] was concerned that Toowoomba City Council's plan to recycle water had been forced upon the south-west without first allowing an open discussion of possible alternative."

"Mr Andersen said that it was possible that an integrated regional approach, in which a number of water sourcing alternatives were employed, could negate the need to drink recycled water." [Such an approach would be far more innovative than the Mayor's proposal.]

"The Mayor (Dianne Thorley) keeps saying there are no other options," Mr Andersen said. "But there are." [Another person implies that the Mayor is misleading the public.]

"Such alternatives which could be combined in a multi-faceted plan, included extracting water from the Chinchilla gas fields for outlying towns, or exchanging water with Norwin irrigators."

"He said the Toowoomba City Council's Water Futures project, which was yet to receive the funding nod from the Prime Minister, had been forced without compromise on to an unreceptive community." [Absolutely correct - where is the public consultation - "if you don't like it, drink bottled water" is the Mayor's response.]

$68 million recycling plan awaits return of PM ...

Quite a good summary of some of the issues so far:

From the Toowoomba Chronicle - some excerpts (with annotations)

20 January 2006

The debate so far ...

News on the federal funding for the $68m Toowoomba Water Futures project is expected after Prime Minister Howard returns from holidays.

Toowoomba City Council's director of engineering, Kevin Flanagan, delivered the update on Wednesday - during its first sitting of committee meetings for 2006.

A "yeah, no or maybe," predicted before Christmas did not eventuate.

All has been quiet on the southern front. The Toowoomba Water Futures funding application was lodged with the National Water Commission on June 30.

News of the council plan to beat the uncertain water supplies by recycling wastewater for human consumption initially met with deafening [stunned] silence.

Toowoomba Mayor Dianne Thorley's popularity was put to the test when she walked into a cauldron of community anxiety like none she's ever faced.

More than 500 citizens streamed into Centenary Heights hall, where a placard-waving, booing horde was demanding a referendum to let the people decide.

Unity in the ranks began to disintegrate when former mayor Clive Berghofer, privy to all the behind closed-door briefings, broke ranks fearing for the city's image.

Politicians, once thought to support the project, were also having doubts despite assurances from scientists [the ones with the vested interests] and chemistry experts [ex-nursery man returned to school teaching] proclaiming the recycled water would be safe.

A petition of 7,082 signatures, which now is nearing 10,000, opposing the water recycling for human consumption was sent to John Howard, Peter Beattie and Toowoomba City Council.

Extra CSIRO testing, which would delay the drinking of recycled water to 2011 or 2012, was promised in October. [Note - the Mayor only offered this in the face of Mr Macfarlane's opposition. The original plan had no such testing over a number of years before introducing it for drinking, notwithstanding the various reports that say that more research is required on the effects of drinking recycled sewage.]

But member for Groom Ian Macfarlane was still not satisfied and withdrew his support pending feasibility [studies] on alternative water options. [A sensible decision in view of the half-truths and misinformation emanating for the Council.]

Cr Thorley said the homework had been done and there were no other feasible alternative. [This has been proved wrong - she refused to listen to any other options.]

Council's director of engineering, Kevin Flanagan, came up with the supporting figures. [This was the quick and dirty DNR review which looked at the Council's figures and did no independent assessment.]

After councillors had initially taken a united stand, Crs Lyle Shelton, Keith Beer and Graham Barron began revealing their own wavering convictions over health issues.

And then Cr Shelton's own investigations revealed visitors to Disneyland did not drink recycled water as portrayed in Water Futures promotional material. [How amateurish is the Council's approach to this issue?]

Long-term council vision lacking ...

Letter to the Editor, Toowoomba Chronicle:

The council admits that recycling is only a short-term solution in its submission to the Australian Water Fund, Attachment E pages (i) and again page 1: Water Futures Toowoomba is an initiative proposed by the Toowoomba City Council to maximise recycling and to defer the need for the construction of a major new water source.

If, as Mayor Dianne Thorley says, "there are no other water options", then what construction of a major new water resource is being deferred?

The council has already deferred tackling the water supply issue for two terms and again is leaving it to a future council to tackle the harsh reality that a new water supply is needed.

It makes more sense to tackle the hard options now and construct a new major water source, be it CSG water, irrigator swap, Wivenhoe pipeline or dam to ensure a drought-proof future for Toowoomba.

This council lacks long-term vision.

SM
Toowoomba

Press release - Jondaryan residents reject recycled drinking water ...

Here's what the Jondaryan Shire said in their press release on the issue:

Jondaryan Shire Council Media release
4.1.2006

Jondaryan residents reject recycled drinking water.

Jondaryan residents have given the thumbs down to recycled waste water being added to drinking water. Jondaryan Shire Mayor Peter Taylor said residents were asked their opinion on seven statements regarding supply of reticulated water.

The questions were part of a community satisfaction survey conducted by marketing research firm Market Facts (Qld) in late October 2005.

“Residents were asked how much they agreed or disagreed with the statements on a five point scale.

Nearly 80% supported a statement that recycling of waste water was essential, but recycled water should be supplied in ‘purple pipes’ for use on public parks, gardens, playing fields and by industry, and not put back into drinking water.

This result shows that there is a long way to go, at least in Jondaryan Shire, before residents would be happy to accept Toowoomba City’s recycling proposal.”

The mayor said that two-thirds of residents agreed that supply of reticulated water was limited and the need to use less water was more important than price. “Almost half disagreed with the proposition that the price the consumer paid for reticulated water was more important than where the water came from or how it was treated,” he said.

There was a high level of ‘no opinion’ for statements suggesting residents were fully informed on the recycling issues, that Toowoomba water authorities had explored all options and recycling waste water back into reticulated water was essential to meet future demand, and that Jondaryan Shire should reject recycled drinking water from Toowoomba and find its own supply.

“Until Jondaryan Shire is certain it has been fully informed on all the issues and options surrounding recycling, we are unable to take a leading role in informing our residents. The replies in this survey show that public awareness is less than it should be on these issues.”

The mayor said there was strong agreement with the proposition that Jondaryan Shire should introduce incentives to encourage all householders to install rainwater tanks to supply drinking water.Market Facts also conducted a State-wide survey of community satisfaction with local government services last year.

When satisfaction levels of Jondaryan Shire residents were compared State-wide, shire residents were significantly more satisfied with the quality of services than the average for rural councils and for all local governments in Queensland.

See- Jondaryan Shire rejects recycled water.

Jondaryan Shire residents say NO to drinking recycled water ...

Residents of one of the Toowoomba City Council's water customers say no to drinking recycled water. At least they were asked to complete a survey.

From the Chronicle

27 January 2006

Re-used waste won't be to taste

Jondaryan Shire residents don't want to drink recycled water.

A local government satisfaction survey, where seven questions about water were added, found 80% of the 250 respondents agreed that the treatment of wastewater is essential.

However, they believed it should be used for industry or supplied to households through purple pipes.

Councillors this week heard consultant Market Facts found limited support for the shire to reject a supply containing recycled water.

"The result shows that there is a long way to go, at least in Jondaryan Shire, before residents would be happy to accept Toowoomba City Council's recycling proposal."

He said about 30% of respondents said they did not understand the Toowoomba Water Futures project.

Mayor Peter Taylor said he was not about "to bash Toowoomba Mayor Dianne Thorley over the head with the document".

He intends raising the survey results at a regional working group.

Cr Thorley agreed residents needed information on the project, but promptly reiterated that there would be no project until it received Federal Government funding.

The respondents want council to provide rebates to encourage the installation of rainwater tanks.

The survey, which ranked council performance above the rural and Sate averages, found the top priorities for council should be water supply and roads.

Toowoomba Water Futures project costs ...

To date, over $400,000 has been spent on consultancies for the Mayor's controversial recycled sewage project, including:

- $360,900 paid to CH2M Hill
- $27,570 paid to Arup Water Qld
- $8,400 paid to GHD
- $10,000 paid to 4Site Natural Solutions
- $2,380 paid to Jocelyn Peak Pty Ltd
- $220 paid to Rowland Communication Group

(Figures published in the Chronicle on 20 January 2005)

Interestingly, CH2M Hill accounts for almost 90% of the consulting fees. Early on in the water debate, the Mayor denied any CH2M Hill involvement.

How interesting when the truth does finally come out ...

Hackers attack Toowoomba Water Futures website ...

BREAKING NEWS

Who says there's not enough water in Toowoomba ...

See - Water Futures website attacked!

Thursday, January 26, 2006

Friction over ratepayers' water book ...

From the Toowoomba Chronicle (annotated):

20 January 2005

Friction over ratepayers' water book

It may be a new year, but there is still a prickliness in the air at the Toowoomba City Council chamber.

Mention the Toowoomba Water Futures project and some councillors really bristle.

The push is to open the door on all future discussions.

Cr Keith Beer wanted to know why the water book, to be sent to ratepayers to promote the proposed recycling project, was not included as an agenda item. [Note to Cr Beer - to hide it from the dissenting Councillors and the public until it is posted.]

Council's Director of Engineering Kevin Flanagan said the book, which was expected back from the printer at 3pm yesterday, was still in draft form and not yet a "public" document. [So Councillors can't have access to it? Maybe the Mayor told him not to give it to them.]

Cr Sue Englart, feeling the friction, called for scrutiny of the book to be deferred.

"If you try to keep track of when things are discussed there is no set date on record - and it's near impossible to track", she said [That's why it should have been an agenda item - then it's easy to track.]

Other councillors wondered why the rush. A call for the book to be distributed to councillor at the next round of meetings, in two weeks, failed.

Cr Michele Alroe protested.

"I'm very keen to get as much information as soon as I can. I'm a councillor for the people and I need to be informed", she said. [Some friction developing with the Mayor?]

Mr Flanagan said the information was nothing new and merely a compilation of the information on the Toowoomba Water Futures website and the public presentation. [Great - soon to be renamed the "Book of Half-Truths".]

Mr Flanagan then tabled an extensive breakdown of the costs of the Toowoomba Water Futures project so far.

The information was the final response to 10 questions posed previously by Cr Keith Beer.

Water Futures progress ...

At the Council Committee meetings held on 17 and 18 January, an update was given on the Water Futures project.

Here's what was contained in the minutes - the rather sanitised version without all the tough questions!

Water Futures project

The Director Engineering Services (DES) briefed the Committee on the progress of the Water Futures Project.

- Council is still awaiting a decision on funding from the Commonwealth Government under the Australian Water Fund. It is expected that any decision will be after the Prime Minister returns from leave on Australia Day.

- Further work has continued on production of a Water Book and preliminary arrangements for the proposed Water Expo. DES reminded Councillors of a briefing on the Draft Water Book which was to be held at 4.00pm that afternoon.

- DES advised the Committee that he had circulated a report on Water Futures Toowoomba Line Item Expenditure by email on 17 January and tabled a copy of the report at the meeting (Doc. Nos. 2578248, 2579134, 2579137).

In addition:

Request for update on Program to access additional Groundwater

Cr Ramia requested that a briefing be provided at the next Committee of the Council Meeting on the status of the program to access additional groundwater (Toowoomba Basalt and Artesian Basin).

See - Council meeting minutes.

Wednesday, January 25, 2006

More gas fired power stations = more gas water ...

New facility brings home the bacon for Darling Downs community

Monday 23 January 2006

Energy Minister John Mickel says a new electricity installation being facilitated by Ergon Energy will provide a significant boost to a major Darling Downs employer while delivering environmental benefits to the local community.

Mickel says agreement has been reached to build a $6 million, 4.5 megawatt electricity co-generation facility to provide on-site power for Toowoomba's KR Castlemaine (KRC) meat processing factory.

Mickel launched the project, in which DDCE Pty Ltd will design, build, own and operate the facility for the Darling Downs icon.

KR Castlemaine and Ergon Energy have begun building the $6 million gas fired facility at the processor's Mort Street site.

"It is also another step towards Ergon Energy meeting its commitment to the Queensland Government's Gas Scheme requirement of energy retailers to source 13% of their power from gas-fired generation."

The new co-generation facility is expected to be operational by October this year.

See - More demand for gas.

Coal seam gas flows from Surat Basin

Wednesday, January 25, 2006

Arrow Energy has become the first company to deliver supplies of coal seam gas from the Surat Basin in southern Queensland.

The gas is being extracted and piped from Arrow's Kogan North field 40 kilometres west of Dalby.

Chief executive Nick Davis says it is a major milestone for the basin.

"We've shown over the course of the last two years, us and others, that gas can be produced in small quantities from small pilot programs, but nobody has yet shown in a full scale development the whole field will behave in the way we hoped it would behave and that full scale development has now proved that," he said.

See - More coal seam gas.

Berghofer stance finds support ...

Some interesting comments.

Perhaps underground water sources are not the only answer but the Toowoomba City Council should examine all water options in an open and transparent manner - this has not been their approach to date.

What are they afraid of?

Letter to the Editor, Toowoomba Chronicle:

Berghofer stances finds support

It has me totally baffled as to why the Toowoomba City Council's water management people do not listen to Mr Clive Berghofer's ideas on water management.

Mr Berghofer is obviously a man of vision, integrity, and has the total community of the city at heart.

He did not get where he is today by being a fool. Listen to him.

The water is under the ground. Drill for it.

If certain people in the council chamber get their way and they recycle sewage, there will be an exodus of people from this city, business will be stifled, development will cease and visitors will stay away in droves.

Would you feel clean after a shower in recycled water?

Would you feel healthy after drinking it?

The answer is no. The exodus of people may have already started.

Why are there so many houses for sale?

Look at Saturday's property section in the Chronicle. There's page after page of them.

Council, please listen to Mr Berghofer, he makes good sense. As it stands now, council's water management strategy is nothing short of pathetic.

NW
Toowoomba

Ruling busts open sewage monopoly ...

Looks like Sydney will soon have private operators harvesting sewage:

JOHN van der Merwe's determination to get into sewage has paid off, with the announcement the businessman is free to set up the world's first private sector sewage collection service.

The Australian Competition Council ruled yesterday that Mr van der Merwe's company, Services Sydney, and other businesses should be allowed to offer residents choice in how they dispose of their waste water.

Mr van der Merwe will now start negotiating for access to the 450 billion litres of waste water that Sydney Water, a New South Wales Government-owned corporation, pumps out to sea.

The decision effectively ends the monopoly held by Sydney Water and clears the way for more efficient, environmentally friendly and cheaper services.

The South African-born Mr van der Merwe says that instead of polluting the ocean, the waste water should be cleaned and then piped west to be used in agriculture and industry.

Services Sydney plans to offer comparable prices to Sydney Water, and will compete for customers on the basis of green technology.

It plans to invest in infrastructure to bypass old sewers and sewage treatment plants.

See - Ruling busts open sewage monopoly.

Governor-General shies away from drinking recycled water ...

Seems the people of Toowoomba aren't the only ones cautious about drinking recycled water:

Kalgoorlie is hosting the first major Australia Day event of the year, a dawn ceremony to be held today, with Maj-Gen Jeffery, current Australian of the Year Dr Fiona Wood, Young Australian of the Year Khao Do, performers James Blundell and Casey Donovan, among others.

Maj-Gen Jeffery yesterday visited a waste water treatment plant but he and his wife Marlena shied away from tasting the recycled water.


See - G-G shies away from drinking recycled water.

Tuesday, January 24, 2006

MP Turnbull now responsible for water policy ...

Prime Minister John Howard has promoted two of his star backbenchers in a cabinet reshuffle.

Andrew Robb and Malcolm Turnbull have been appointed as parliamentary secretaries in a reshuffle forced by last week's retirement of Defence Minister Robert Hill.

Millionaire Mr Turnbull has been promoted to parliamentary secretary to the prime minister with particular responsibility for water policy.


Mr Turnbull is an advocate of water recycling - but not for drinking.

Two quotes from 2005:

"But from a practical point of view there is simply no need to introduce recycled water into the potable water system. There are ample uses for recycled water: industrial, parks, gardens, street cleaning and above all, replenishing the streamflows of our rivers and thereby replacing the potable water currently released into them."

See - Turnbull speech.

"Well, you can frame the question in all sorts of ways to get the answer you seek, of course. But let me just say this question of drinking recycled water in Sydney is a furphy. It's a non-issue, because there is no need to put that recycled water back into the drinking water system. There are plenty of non-potable, non-drinking uses for it, not least of which is restoring the environmental flows in our rivers. Israel is a good example. They recycle 70 per cent of their waste water and drink none of it and have no need to drink any of it. Can you treat recycled water to make it fit for drinking? Of course you can. Absolutely, and in many parts of the world that is done. Do we need to do it in Sydney? No, we do not."

See - ABC Insiders interview.

It will be interesting to see the impact of these changes on the water debate ...

Toowoomba City Council CEO - position vacant ...

The ad for the CEO position:

Job Title: Chief Executive Officer

Industry: Local Government

Organisation: Toowoomba City Council

Job Description:

- Excellent leadership opportunity

- Envied location in South East Queensland

- Outstanding lifestyle options

The City of Toowoomba, a part of South East Queensland and the focal point of the Darling Downs region, is Australia’s largest inland regional city. With a population of over 94,000, Toowoomba offers outstanding lifestyle options and opportunities.

Located just over an hour’s easy drive from Brisbane at the top of the Great Dividing Range, Toowoomba enjoys an excellent climate, free from excess humidity, and is amazingly well serviced, including excellent education facilities (boasting some of Queensland’s finest private schools, the University of Southern Queensland and TAFE), highly regarded health services and a growing reputation for restaurants, coffee shops and wineries. Diverse and affordable housing options are also a feature.

The role requires a visionary and strategic thinker, with a strong outcomes focus and outstanding leadership skills.

In particular, the successful applicant will be able to demonstrate well-developed leadership abilities and a history of achievement in building organisational culture around service excellence and high levels of employee job satisfaction.

Additionally, the successful applicant will be able to adopt a balanced approach to contributing to the building of a sustainable future for Toowoomba and its surrounding region.

Executive management experience in Local Government will be well regarded.

The Council has a current budget of over $150 million, employs over 850 staff and provides a diverse range of Local Government Services.

To attract an outstanding candidate, Council will negotiate an attractive performance based remuneration package.

An information pack, including a Position Description, can be obtained by contacting here. To apply please forward your written application, in the strictest confidence, via email to here or to the address here no later than 15th February 2006.

Is this really truth in advertising?

Chris Rose is due to depart on 3 February (see - departure press release) and applications for the CEO role close on 15 February.

It should take at least one month to select a candidate and any worthwhile candidate will then need to give notice with his existing position. That could add another 3 months (unless the notice period is shortened).

Looks like the Council may be without a CEO for some time.

See - Please send a new CEO.

Monday, January 23, 2006

CEO hunt commences ....

The hunt for a new CEO for the Toowoomba City Council has commenced.

The minutes of the Council Committee meetings on 17 and 18 January show that the process for finding a replacement for outgoing CEO Chris Rose commenced on 14 January.

This could be a difficult position to fill. Any applicant will no doubt talk to the outgoing CEO about the problems within the Council and whether it is a particularly wonderful environment in which to work.

Suggested questions for any applicant:

- what's it like to work with the Mayor on a daily basis?

- has the Council been completely honest with the ratepayers regarding its controversial recycled sewage program?

- will the new CEO need to spend a lot of time talking to the CMC?

See - who will take the CEO role?

DNR highlights growing number of illegal bores ...

From ABC News:

The Department of Natural Resources (DNR) says bores are being drilled illegally on the Darling Downs.

The department's Gerry Harth says the number of bores being drilled for domestic use around Toowoomba has more than doubled because of a lack of rain.

He says a licensed driller should always be used to avoid contamination of water supplies.
"We're aware in one small town outside of Toowoomba where people are constructing their own bores," he said.


"The aquifer system is very shallow, it's good quality water and there's a fair amount of it.

"They're constructing these bores using hand augers so they are quite easy to drill, but we're also aware that those bores aren't being constructed to [the] department's standards and specifications."

See - Illegal bores.

Sunday, January 22, 2006

Common industrial chemicals in tiny doses raise health issue ...

An interesting read:

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

Advanced Tests Often Detect Subtle Biological Effects; Are Standards Too Lax?

Getting in Way of Hormones

For years, scientists have struggled to explain rising rates of some cancers and childhood brain disorders. Something about modern living has driven a steady rise of certain maladies, from breast and prostate cancer to autism and learning disabilities.

One suspect now is drawing intense scrutiny: the prevalence in the environment of certain industrial chemicals at extremely low levels. A growing body of animal research suggests to some scientists that even minute traces of some chemicals, always assumed to be biologically insignificant, can affect such processes as gene activation and the brain development of newborns.



See comments for the full article ...

Saturday, January 21, 2006

Developers need to pay - why not the water recyclers ...

Responding to traffic problems in southern Ruthven Street, Deputy Mayor Joe Ramia has flagged the need for property developers to pay a fee which can be used to rectify unforeseen traffic issues 5 to 10 years down the track.

But the developers of the recycled sewage project are not being asked to pay a fee to rectify unforeseen health issues 5 to 10 (or 20 to 30) years down the track.

Why the double standard, Deputy Mayor?

See - Developers can pay - but water recyclers get off for free.

Thorley Water - the sweet taste of tomorrow ...

A weekend blog - to amuse or offend - adapted from the Singapore NEWater song:

Thorley Water

We have refreshment for tomorrow
It's our pee, it's our pee
Straight from the bowls of Toowoomba
Drink your pee, drink your pee
You and me, we'll do our part
We'll try to pee, without a fart
We'll show the Mayor that we'd like to help
And drink our pee, and drink our pee!

Why flush something down our bowl that is so tasty
It's eco-friendly, and comes straight from our kidney
There's a toilet over there
Let's make a drink that we can share
But we're going to call it something else that's more catchy
Instead of pee, instead of pee.

Count on us, to help the state
It's patriotic to urinate
Let's all achieve the Mayor's dream
And drink from our stream, drink from our stream.


That's what should be on the Council's new brochure!

Friday, January 20, 2006

Cheaper water - for Sydney ...

It seems it's not just Mayor Thorley who has been conservative with the truth:

FOR months the NSW State Government has been sitting on a secret $250 million water recycling proposal that could provide 5 per cent of Sydney's water needs and increase by four times the amount of recycled water in the city.

Under the confidential proposal by the gas company AGL, disused gas mains would deliver recycled water to industry.

The plan was put to Sydney Water last March, and AGL wants to begin construction in July.

The project, which could provide 30 gigalitres of non-potable water for use by industry, only came to light yesterday. The Greens had requested a review of claims for privilege by the Premier's department on key documents relating to desalination.


The AGL proposal involves re-using old gas mains, by lining them with plastic and, in some areas, laying new water pipes in the same trenches as new gas pipes.

Several potential customers have already been identified, including Shell, Visy Industries, Sithe Energies, Orica, Caltex and Amcor. Other customers could include golf courses, local councils and even residential customers in new housing.

Anthony O'Brien, a spokesman for the acting Minister for Utilities, David Campbell, said the Government would support any proposal for recycled water for industrial and outdoor use but did not support adding it to the drinking water supply. He denied the AGL project was a substitute for desalination. "The reality is we still need desalination as a new source of water in the future."

See - Cheaper water.

Premier defends desalination plant ...

Controversy south of the border as well ....

Premier defends desalination plant

NSW Premier Morris Iemma has come to the defence of his government's planned desalination plant after it was revealed the former head of Sydney Water criticised the proposal in 2003.

A December 2003 letter from Greg Robertson to then utilities minister Frank Sartor said there were cheaper and more efficient options to secure Sydney's water supply than a desalination plant.

Despite the advice, the Government decided to build a $1.3-billion desalination plant at Kurnell in southern Sydney to remove salt from sea water for domestic consumption.

Mr Iemma today said dam levels had dropped since 2003, making the decision to build a desalination plant necessary.

"Dam levels are 20 per cent lower and we know that with climate change our droughts are getting longer, we know also with climate change our weather patterns have changed," he said.
"Sydney needs to access a new source of water."


Mr Iemma said there were about 7000 desalination plants in 100 countries.

"Desalination gives us a new guaranteed water and it doesn't mean that we have to cross our fingers or pray for rain," he said.

See - Premier defends desalination plant.

Thursday, January 19, 2006

Dual flush toilets not the answer ...

... according to the Toowoomba City Council anyway.

They no longer offer rebates:

"Single Flush Toilet Replacement

The rebate to replace a single flush toilet with a AAA rated toilet will not be offered in 2005-06. For any enquiries contact the WaterWise call centre on 4688 6253."


According to Sydney Water, about 15 per cent of water used by homes goes down the toilet. Imagine how much dual flush toilets would save.

We wouldn't want to assist the Toowoomba ratepayers saving water, would we?

They were offering deals on new shower heads but that now seems a little out of date:

"Shower Heads

Is your old shower head bucketing kilolitres of hot water down the drain? You can save by using a AAA-rated shower rose. 3000 Toowoomba residents have already taken up the offer of our free new for old exchange program. Congratulations! Look for our next offer later in 2005. "

And rebates still apply for clothes washers:

"Toowoomba residents who purchase any AAAA front-loading washing machine from 1st July 2005 and apply for the rebate at the time of purchase will receive by mail a refund of $50 from Council. Proof of purchase and the completed rebate application form must be immediately faxed by the retailer to 4688 6969. Only Toowoomba retailers will have the rebate forms."

See - Toowoomba Water Futures - no rebates for AAA rated toilets.

Wednesday, January 18, 2006

Brisbane reopens back up dam ...

SOUTHEAST Queensland added another dam to its arsenal yesterday in a move that cost Brisbane City Council more than $200,000 and could cover less than 1 per cent of the region's daily water consumption.

Lord Mayor Campbell Newman warned residents not to become complacent, as the additional dam would not provide significant relief and would only be used as a "back-up resource" in case the region's water supply ran critically low.

The Enogerra Dam, at The Gap on Brisbane's westside, was recommissioned after 3½ years, in which time it filled to 94 per cent of its capacity or 4230 megalitres.

See - Enoggera dam reopened.

Rain - how quickly things can change ...

No major increase in the dams surrounding Toowoomba as yet, but how quickly things can change after a little rain:

Wild Australian summer returns
January 18, 2006

WELCOME back to a typical Australian summer.


After three of the driest and warmest years on record we've forgotten what it is like to live through summer in Australia - hot and humid days building to thunderstorms, hail and cyclones.

Last year was the warmest since records began in 1910 with a mean temperature of 22.89C. Rainfall was below normal with an average of 399mm falling nationwide - almost 100mm less than the average.

This year, the rainfall in January has been widespread and above average. The first cyclone of the season has hit and another one is brewing, and Western Australia and New South Wales are suffering their worst floods on record.

"This is a marked contrast to last summer," the Bureau of Meteorology's John Cramb said last night. "It's not unprecedented but it is a little unusual."

Farmers at Lake Grace, in Western Australia's wheatbelt, took to jetskis and tinnies to rescue hundreds of sheep stranded by floodwaters caused by Cyclone Clare last week.

On the east coast of the country, 53mm of rain fell on Noosa in just 18 minutes last week, flooding streets and properties.


And in drought-stricken Goulburn on Monday, a large dump of more than 120mm resulted in flash floods through the town's streets. "There were floodwaters flowing down through town. They got a great dumping," farmer Angus Gibson said.

The bureau says the east coast downpours will continue for at least a further two days with storms today and rain tapering off by Friday.

Unfortunately, the heavy rains across the nation have not hit all the catchment areas for all the major cities.

Western Australia's dams are only 39 per cent full, unaffected by the heavy rainfall caused by Cyclone Clare.

Southeast Queensland's Wivenhoe Dam is at 33.9 per cent yesterday, the Somerset Dam is at 32.9 per cent and the North Pine Dam is at 34.8 per cent.

Despite the heavy rains in Goulburn, the Pejar dam was almost empty yesterday, rising from 6 to 7 per cent capacity.

But heavy rainfalls over Sydney's catchment areas appear to have hit the mark.

Sydney Catchment Authority spokeswoman Debbie Low said if the rain continued for a further four days dams could reach 70 per cent capacity, up from the current 40 per cent. "At that level, there is the possibility of relaxing the restrictions."

See - Rain could wreck Mayor's plans.

Researchers seek to cut evaporation from dams ...

Some good news for a change ...

The Chronicle on 7 January reported that researchers at USQ are hoping to minimise evaporation from dams using a liquid product which acts as a barrier between the sun's rays and water.

The alcohol-based liquid which spreads a thin film along the surface of the water could be used on much larger dams.

By pouring mono-layer over the water every few days and watching it spread through a process if ionic repulsion was not only more economical but practical.

The product was environmentally friendly and could possibly be used on large municipal dams.

Tuesday, January 17, 2006

Supplies conserved, only to evaporate ...

16 Jan 2006

WHILE southeast Queensland residents save 200 megalitres a day with water restrictions, 280 megalitres a day disappears from our dams in evaporation.

Worse still, evaporation has probably increased over the past year in which Australia endured its hottest 12 months on record.

SEQWater acting chief executive Rob Drury said yesterday although evaporation caused a significant loss in all dams, it was difficult to estimate exactly how much more was lost due to global warming.

The 280 megalitres is equivalent to 40 per cent of total daily water use of 700 megalitres.

Mr Drury said over the past year Wivenhoe, Somerset and North Pine dams lost about 102,000 megalitres to evaporation.

Measuring evaporation was inexact because it varied widely according to weather. Hotter conditions played a role, but other major factors were the number of windy days, wind strength, waves, clouds and surface area.

Engineers used weather bureau pan evaporation rates from sites close to dams to calculate losses.

When dams were full – and therefore had a greater surface – evaporation more than doubled to 223,300 megalitres a year or 612 megalitres a day.

"People often say we should cover the dams in some way but the areas involved are just too big," Mr Drury said.

The dams' surface area at full capacity was 170 sq km.

Mr Drury said evaporation rates also had to be offset by the natural recycling effect. Rainfall on lake surfaces put water into storages regardless of any catchment runoff.

Assuming an average annual 1m rainfall for the three dams resulted in a gain of about 78,350 megalitres a year or 215 megalitres a day at current levels.

"The net result for the three dams is thus a loss of around 65 megalitres a day for the current storage levels or 143 megalitres a day for the full supply level," he said.

The nation's annual mean temperature increase last year was 1.09C, making it the warmest year since reliable observations became available in 1910.


see - Supplies conserved, only to evaporate.

Monday, January 16, 2006

First Council Committee meeting for 2006 ...

The Toowoomba City Council meets for the first time in '06 this week.

Not much in the agenda of interest to the water debate but let's see how long the Mayor and Deputy Mayor keep their cool when asked more searching questions about the controversial recycled sewage project.

Perhaps a good opening question is - why has the Council not told the public about its plans to use public money to build a $3 million CH2M Hill designed information centre as part of the proposal?

Or - how was the amount of $3 million determined? Has the Council any real idea of how much it would cost or has it just accepted the ballpark number given to it?

Boom to drain dams ...

No mention from the State government today of the need to drink recycled water.

Is it because the Minister is on leave?

From the Courier Mail:

16 jan06

WATER supply capacity in southeast Queensland has fallen dramatically over the past two decades, raising doubts about the ability to service Australia's fastest-growing population.

On a per-capita basis, water storage has fallen by almost 40 per cent since the massive Wivenhoe Dam was completed in the mid-1980s.

As the region struggles with a long-running drought, the decline in water supply capacity is tipped to continue.

Liberal MP Michael Caltabiano, who commissioned research into water supply by the Parliamentary Library, said the State Government had failed to invest in vital infrastructure to support the growing population.

But Acting Natural Resources Minister John Mickel said Mr Caltabiano had misunderstood the figures. He said water supplies were "more secure than ever" as a result of the South East Queensland Regional Plan.

The population of the southeast corner is projected to reach 3.7 million in 2025, a 117 per cent increase on the 1985 population of 1.7 million.

But water storage capacity over the same period will grow by only 7.3 per cent, from 2.1 million megalitres to 2.26 million, according to the regional plan.

As a result, storage capacity per person will fall by more than half, from 1.24Ml a person to 0.61Ml a person.

The figures take into account the expected construction of the Cedar Grove Weir and Wyaralong Dam, and the addition of the Ewen Maddock Dam to water supply resources.

Mr Caltabiano said the situation was even more dire when the water needs of the booming business sector were taken into account.

He said the Government had shown it would not act to secure vital services until its failures were exposed by a supply crisis.

"It's a pattern of behaviour. I reinforce it by pointing out what happened with energy – no money was spent until the lights went out," he said.

"It was the same with health – no money was spent until people started dying.

"In water, it'll be doing nothing until the taps run dry."

Mr Mickel said the Government and local councils were not relying solely on dams.

"We are upgrading water storages, we are driving water recycling for industry, we are integrating urban water management for developments using water recycling and rainwater tanks, we are reducing losses in water storage from evaporation and losses in distributing water," he said.

He said Mr Caltabiano as a former city councillor should understand water strategies, but was "too busy plotting, juggling and undermining".

"When looking at dams and weirs, it is the yield – the amount of available water – not maximum storage that counts," Mr Mickel said.

Lord Mayor Campbell Newman said there had been significant savings in water use since restrictions, and industrial recycling would also cut demand.

But there were "supply-side issues" that needed to be addressed and he was very worried about the situation.

See - Boom to drain dams.

Drinking recycled sewage - what if things go wrong ...

The Council is offering no "100% guarantee" on the safety of its recycled sewage for drinking proposal.

Who will bear the responsibility in future years if it proves not to be as safe as the Council's claims?

Should the cost be borne by the local council which introduced it into the water supply, by the State or Federal governments who may provide funding or by the recycled water companies whose product was not as safe and efficient as they claimed it to be?

Will the recycled water companies still exist in the future or will they try a "James Hardie asbestos style arrangement" to distance themselves from liability?

Will there be any requirement to insure against the health risk? Will any insurance company be willing to provide appropriate insurance? What sort of liability tail would be needed - 20 years, 50 years?

Or will the residents of Toowoomba be left to self-insure - take the risk that if something does go wrong they will bear the financial burden themselves.

The more one thinks about the Mayor's scheme, the more questions arise ...

Sunday, January 15, 2006

Mayor Thorley - why the obsession?

The recycled sewage debate makes you wonder why:

- Mayor Thorley is obsessed with making Toowoomba's residents drink recycled sewage

- the Council quickly dismisses other possibly viable water sources

- Mayor Thorley ignores the recommendations of the Sustainable Cities Inquiry Report

- the Council perpetuates the myth of the independence of certain advisers

- Mayor Thorley continues to believe she has the support of the community

- the Council misleads the public as to how long the water in the dams will last?

It really does make you wonder ....

Drug traces found in water pose problem for wildlife ...

From the Baltimore Sun - 17 October 2005

Pharmaceuticals passing unaltered from humans into nation's waterways

By Tom Pelton

Over the last two years, scientists working on the Potomac River have netted 111 smallmouth bass with bizarre sexual traits. The fish were males but had eggs growing inside their testes.

Researchers found many of these gender-bending bass downstream from sewage treatment plants in water tinged with a chemical called ethinylestradiol - the active ingredient in birth control pills.

More studies are necessary, biologists say, but evidence is mounting that trace levels of prescription drugs in rivers and streams may be harming fish, tadpoles, frogs, mussels and oysters. The pharmaceuticals are passing unaltered through people's bodies and sewage plants into waterways.

In Georgia and Mississippi, scientists recently discovered that the antidepressant Prozac, in water downstream from sewage plants, can kill tadpoles, stunt the growth of others and befuddle the survivors so they swim in circles and can't flee from predators.

In Pennsylvania, a biologist reported that small amounts of Prozac may cause mussels and clams to discharge their sperm and eggs prematurely, dooming their offspring. And in Texas, a researcher found that the sexual organs of male minnows shrank when they were lowered into a river tainted with birth control drugs.

"We might just be seeing the tip of the iceberg in terms of the cumulative impact of all this," said Dr. Thomas Burke, associate chairman of health policy at the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health.

Pollution concerns

He said concerns about pharmaceutical pollution are likely to become more urgent as a growing human population consumes a multiplying number of medications.

"This is an important area we have to study more," Burke said.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is working with other federal offices to investigate whether the government should require better sewage filtration systems to remove drugs before water is discharged, according to the agency.

Pharmaceuticals are not regulated as pollutants, and most sewage plants are not designed to break them all down.

One stumbling block to adding better filtration systems is the cost, which could reach $100 million to install advanced technology on each large sewage treatment plant, said Shane Snyder, research manager at the Southern Nevada Water Authority.

"The water industry has no problem spending the public's money to put in new [filter] technology," Snyder said. "But the cost might mean that fewer schools can be built or fewer hospitals."

Vicki Blazer, a fish pathologist with the U.S. Geological Survey, began investigating smallmouth bass in the Potomac River a few years ago when fishermen reported that their catch was falling.
She worked with natural resources officials in Maryland and West Virginia, who used devices that fired electric shocks into the Potomac River to stun hundreds of fish in 2003 and 2004.


Blazer said she dissected 184 male bass, and found that 111 of them -- or about 60 percent -- had eggs growing inside their sexual organs. All nine male bass netted downstream from the Hagerstown sewage plant had this sexual abnormality. Fish like these almost never show up in clean rivers, she said.

Blazer is looking into the possibility that the birth control drugs caused the sexual confusion. She also found several other pollutants in the river, including triclosan, a disinfectant used in soap, and trifluralin, a farm pesticide. Any of these chemicals could be disrupting fish hormonal systems, she said.

In an effort to pin down which is causing the mutations, Blazer's colleagues have shocked an additional 100 fish during the last month at five places along the lower Potomac River in Maryland, including downstream from the Blue Plains sewage treatment plant near Washington.

The study is important, Blazer said, because fish with deformed sex organs might not reproduce as well. People also draw drinking water from the Potomac, and the same chemicals that could be harming fish populations might also be hurting humans, she said.

"We use the fish as indicators of ecosystem health, which eventually can translate into human health," she said. "Other researchers have raised concerns about declining sperm counts in human males and increases in testicular cancer." (The purification process used by municipal water systems removes most of these drugs from drinking water, but not all of them, experts say.)

In the Baltimore area, Lynn Roberts, an environmental chemist at the Johns Hopkins University, received a $500,000 EPA grant to test for drugs in the water pouring out of the city's Back River sewage treatment plant, which leads into a tributary of the Chesapeake Bay.
Working with doctoral students Kevin Bisceglia and Jim Yu, she found 39 of the 52 chemicals they tested for, including the painkillers Diclofenac and Naproxen; the anti-seizure drug Phenytoin; and Nonylphenol, a compound formed from the decay of spermicides and other products.


They also found caffeine and evidence of what might have been cocaine flowing into the river, she said.

"We are trying to predict what may be entering the environment, and we hope to know what could pose toxic consequences," Roberts said, standing on a pier in the Back River.
The concentrations are often extremely low, about .1 part per billion, the equivalent of plopping an aspirin into a tank holding 1.3 million gallons of water. But other scientists have found that some chemicals can affect the bodies of animals at even lower levels.


The Prozac factor Marsha Black, a professor of environmental health at the University of Georgia, found that minuscule levels of Prozac in rivers - .05 parts per billion - can slow the growth of tadpoles.

The public's use of Prozac has been soaring in recent years, with 54 million people taking the drug today, a rise of more than 50 percent in the last four years, researchers said. A study by the U.S. Geological Survey in 2002 found Prozac in 28 of 44 streambeds tested nationally.

Black said she was inspired by this study to find whether frogs and tadpoles were being drugged. Amphibian populations have been plummeting over the last quarter century, with at least 34 species vanishing since 1980 and nearly a third of the 5,743 known varieties threatened with extinction, according to the National Wildlife Federation.

Black took fertilized frog eggs and dropped them in 75 plastic tanks in her lab. Then she added water, with half of the tanks infused with the same concentrations of Prozac's active ingredient, fluoxetine, found by a colleague in a river in Mississippi.

She watched the tadpoles grow over 166 days and found that 40 percent of those raised with the drug died, compared with 16 percent of the tadpoles without the medication, said Emily Rogers, a doctoral student who helped with the research.

The drugged tadpoles seemed dazed and confused, and grew to be about 40 percent smaller than those in clean water. "We had some funny swimmers," Black said, "some fellas who could not keep their orientation in the water and would swim around in circle."

In a different experiment, Bryan Brooks, a biologist at Baylor University, placed several dozen fathead minnows into cages and lowered them into Pecan Creek in Denton, Texas, down from a waste plant. The water tested positive for low levels of birth control medications, Brooks said.

After three months, Brooks said he noticed that the sexual organs of the male minnows shrank, the distinctive fat pads behind their heads melted away, and the strong vertical gray lines painting their sides vanished, making them look like females.

At Gettysburg College in Pennsylvania, biologist Peter Fong added low levels of Prozac to tanks of water holding clams and mussels. He said he discovered that the antidepressant spurred a premature discharge of sperm and eggs. Shellfish in the wild would doom their offspring if they spawned like this in the wrong season, Fong said.

"It's not a red flag yet for the environment," Fong said. "It's a pink flag - something worth watching carefully."

See - Drug traces found in water pose problem for wildlife.

Saturday, January 14, 2006

Few thirst for recycled tap water ...

From San Diego:

August 16, 2004

You don't mind using recycled sewer water to keep golf courses lush. It can even be used by factories to manufacture goods. You even like the idea of returning water that went down the drain to the bathroom to flush the toilet.

But the closer it actually gets to you, the less palatable it is. And you still hate the idea of having it come out of the tap.

Those were the results of a recently completed survey tracking the attitudes of San Diego County residents on recycled water.


The survey by the San Diego County Water Authority will be used by water planners to chart the county's water future, said Bill Jacoby, the authority's resources manager.

More than 90 percent of respondents agreed with using recycled water for freeway landscaping and golf courses. Eighty-seven percent support bringing it inside buildings to flush toilets. A building housing a pharmaceutical company in Torrey Pines is doing this now.

There is 70 percent approval for using it on crops as agricultural irrigation.

When it comes to pouring it into recreational lakes, support drops to 49 percent. And forget about drinking it. Even with additional treatment, 63 percent oppose using it for potable, or drinkable, water.

Why?

Of the opponents, 34 percent either don't trust or feel uncomfortable with the process. That's followed by 17 percent who are concerned it will affect their health. Seventeen percent said they don't have enough information.

Even though the public remains firmly against drinking recycled water, the acceptance for other uses is encouraging, Jacoby said.

Every gallon of recycled water frees up a gallon of potable water, which can be sent to homes.

The county uses about 13,000 acre-feet of recycled water annually, Jacoby said. One acre-foot equals about 326,000 gallons, enough to serve the needs of two average households for one year.


The bulk of the recycled water is produced by the city of San Diego Water Department at two treatment plants. In the 1990s, the city aggressively pursued the cleaned-up sewage as the solution to the drought that plagued Southern California early in the decade.

The toilet-to-tap plan would have pumped recycled water into a reservoir, which would be treated a second time before it was delivered to customers' taps.

The San Diego City Council killed the program in 1999 in the face of strong public opposition.
The Water Department has not given up on the idea.


It is about to embark on a program to increase the use of recycled water in the areas that show strong support.

One treatment plant handles 25 million gallons of sewer water daily. It recycles about 5 million gallons, and the remainder is sent into the ocean.

Unlike the toilet-to-tap plan that was sprung on the public, city water officials plan extensive community outreach to try to convince people of the benefits of recycled water.

San Diegans currently use 200 million gallons daily. That figure is expected to rise 25 percent by 2030. Officials see recycled water as an answer to the anticipated increase.

"They want to go about this very methodically and scientifically," said Kurt Kidman, a Water Department spokesman. "We want this to be a real solution to our long-term needs."

Scientists agree that recycled water can help solve many supply problems. But they warn that the program must be executed carefully.

Dave Schubert, a scientist at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies, said the recycled water is commonly disinfected with chlorine to kill bacteria inherent in sewage.

Many times, water agencies add too much chlorine, which can cause pipes to corrode and irritate the stomach if ingested, Schubert said. On other occasions, not enough chlorine is used, which allows bacteria to live and could cause disease.

Because of these potential errors, he is concerned about bringing cleaned-up sewage closer to humans. He points to instances where recycled water pipes were connected to the plumbing for potable water without the owner's knowledge. As recycled water grows in popularity, these incidents could become more common.

"You should minimize the use in areas where there is a lot of plumbing," said Schubert, who also sits on the San Diego County science advisory board. "In residential neighborhoods, it could be a problem."

The water authority telephone survey of 710 people, 406 of whom were San Diego residents, has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.7 percentage points. The full results of the survey can be viewed on the water authority's Web site www.sdcwa.org

See - Recycled sewage survey.

Friday, January 13, 2006

When will the water actually run out ...

Some interesting statistics from the Toowoomba Water Futures website:

"Toowoomba's average daily consumption over the last 12 years has been 34 Megalitres which equates to using a Gigalitre of water every 29 days."

With the dams apparently currently holding 34.2 gigalitres, this water would last 992 days or close to 2 years 9 months.

However, if you look at water consumption for the last 60 days, it has varied from 22 megalitres to 31 megalitres. Using an average of 26 megalitres a day as a rough guide (and with the current water restrictions I imagine Toowoomba is consistently using less than the 12 year average of 34 megalitres a day), this would equate to using a gigalitre of water every 38.5 days. On this basis, the water currently in the dams would last 1317 days or over 3 years 7 months.

This assumes no evaporation (which there will be) but also no rain (anyone in Toowoomba recently knows it has been raining).

The numbers are rough. They exclude surrounding shire consumption but also exclude the impact of part of Toowoomba's water consumption - about 10% or say 2.6 megalitres a day (or 3.4 megalitres a day using the Council's figures) - being sourced from bores. However, it gives an idea of how long the water will last.

The Council has tried to scare Toowoomba's residents into thinking the water would quickly run out. Certain people were circulating rumours that the water would run out by Christmas (I guess it didn't).

There is a need to be waterwise. However, there is also a need to treat with healthy scepticism the statistics put out by the Council.

As the Toowoomba Water Futures website itself says "This data is automatically generated and is not quality controlled. Never base important decisions on this data."

Pity this statement is not on the home page of the Toowoomba Water Futures website.

Join us as we spend your rates on a Japan junket ....

As predicted, none of the Councillors opposing the Mayor's recycled sewage proposal have been invited to go to Japan.

The Mayor and Councillors Englart and Albion will go - a reward for those holding the line?

Why is it that marking sister city relations with Takatsuki City involves travelling to Tokyo, Osaka, Takatsuki and Kyoto?

From the Toowoomba City Council's website:

Join Council friendship tour to Japan

Toowoomba people have the rare opportunity of joining a Friendship Tour to Japan in early April 2006.

Toowoomba City Council is inviting members of the public to accompany the Council delegation to Japan, marking 15 years of Sister City relations with Takatsuki City.

The seven day tour departs April 3 and takes in the cities of Tokyo, Osaka, Takatsuki and Kyoto. It returns to Brisbane on April 10.

A highlight of the organised tour will be the Takatsuki Cherry Blossom Festival, a symbol of Japanese springtime and beauty.

Those joining the tour will accompany Mayor Dianne Thorley, Crs Sue Englart and Regina Albion, three council officers and the Carnival Ambassador as they visit famous Japanese palaces, gardens, temples, shrines and shopping districts.

The tour will include a Mayoral Reception and welcome dinner with Takatsuki City Council. Some free time and sightseeing are included in the itinerary.

Visitors can enjoy the comfort and convenience of an organised tour.

The approximate cost is $4,500 and includes airfare, accommodation, some transfers, tours, travel insurance and some meals.

Expression of interest forms and more information are available from the International Secretariat of the Council on 4688 6747.

Expression of interest forms must be returned to Council by February 3 2006.

See - Councillors tripping around the world.

Join the Mayor and Councillors Englart and Albion and watch them spend your rates!

Thursday, January 12, 2006

Pharmaceuticals in Waterways Raise Concerns ...


From the Washington Post - 23 June 2005

Effect on Wildlife, Humans Questioned

By Juliet Eilperin
Washington Post Staff Writer

Academics, state officials and environmental advocates are starting to question whether massive amounts of discarded pharmaceuticals, which are often flushed down the drain, pose a threat to the nation's aquatic life and possibly to people.

In waterways from the Potomac to the Brazos River in Texas, researchers have found fish laden with estrogen and antidepressants, and many show evidence of major neurological or physiological changes.

No one has seen evidence of effects on human health, but a number are asking publicly why the federal government is not taking a more aggressive approach to what they see as a looming problem.

In October 2002, Maine's Department of Environmental Protection asked federal scientists to analyze water samples to determine to what extent prescription drugs had seeped into the state's waterways. Worried that discarded birth-control pills, antidepressants and other drugs could affect the state's fishing industry and public health, the department's Ann Pistell hoped the federal Environmental Protection Agency's Northeast office could give her a speedy answer.


It was 2 1/2 years before she received a partial report identifying drugs in the water without a detailed explanation -- it came in the past week -- and she said she is still waiting for a full breakdown.

"We're sort of baffled and frustrated by the lack of a sample analysis," said Pistell, an environmental specialist. "We see this as an emerging issue. The more we find out, the more concerned we are."

Some state officials have started organizing. Raoul Clarke, an environmental administrator in Florida's Department of Environmental Protection, has worked with colleagues to establish a listserv where state and local officials can exchange information with concerned activists.

"There are many unanswered questions, but these things are showing up, and people are taking notice," Clarke said.

EPA officials say they are still gauging the seriousness of the threat. Technological advances in testing make it possible to detect very low levels of hormones and chemical compounds in waterways, they say, and it is unclear whether such levels harm animals and people.

Hal Zenick, who monitors health issues in the EPA's Office of Research and Development, said several agencies are working to determine whether such contaminants "lead to exposures, and do these exposures have implications for health effects."

Others, including drug manufacturers and sewage treatment operators, say that while they are monitoring the contaminants, their threat has been overstated.

Thomas White, an environmental consultant for the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA), said industry studies indicate there are "no appreciable human health risks" and no "appreciable impacts on the aquatic environment" linked to drugs in the water.

In recent months, however, scientists have issued a series of findings suggesting that discarded drugs, which pass through municipal wastewater systems and into rivers, lakes and streams, could affect the environment. In 2002, a U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) study found these kinds of contaminants in 80 percent of the 139 streams it sampled in 30 states.

Other researchers suspect that hormones and medicines in the water may be responsible for effects on wildlife that include feminizing male fish and making others sluggish or uninterested in eating.

Rebecca D. Klaper, an ecological genomics scientist at the University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee, recently exposed fathead minnows to a popular anti-cholesterol drug at a level that was only slightly higher than what now occurs in area streams. She had to stop the week-long experiment after 24 hours because the fish were struggling to survive.

"They were sitting at the bottom of the tank, barely moving and barely breathing," Klaper said in an interview. "We're concerned [these pharmaceuticals] are not only having an effect on aquatic organisms, but on human populations as well."

Timothy S. Gross, a USGS toxicologist, has spent several years studying how fish are faring downstream from Las Vegas. He examined three species -- carp, largemouth bass and the endangered razorback sucker -- and detected "a very large and marked decrease in sperm quality and quantity" in all three populations.

There are enough carp and bass to withstand such effects, Gross said, but the razorback sucker may not recover. "When you have a species already on the brink, this may push them over the brink," he said.

Senate Minority Leader Harry M. Reid (D-Nev.), who has secured $2.5 million over the past decade to fund the Geological Survey's water quality studies in the Las Vegas Valley, said the government needs "to do a comprehensive national study to determine how these contaminants might affect our health, our water supplies and our environment. I think it would be irresponsible not to provide funding on this issue. It is a wise, and necessary, investment in our future."

But several rank-and-file EPA employees said senior agency officials have expressed little interest in the subject.

Hilary Snook, an EPA research scientist who has been analyzing pharmaceutical levels in about 45 water samples from Maine, Connecticut, New Hampshire and Vermont, said he has yet to receive funding from headquarters for the project. As a result, he said, his office lacks the money to complete the study quickly.

"I don't think there's much political will at all" to tackle the issue, Snook said. "We should at least look at it. We shouldn't be burying our heads in the sand."

State and local officials are growing increasingly impatient. David Galvin, who manages the hazardous waste program in King County, Wash., is coming under pressure from county residents to collect unused pharmaceuticals from hospitals as well as from elderly residents' homes. He is working with the nonprofit Product Stewardship Institute in Boston to start a national dialogue between drug manufacturers and government agencies on how to minimize the environmental impact of discarded medicines.

"Otherwise, we at the local level are going to be stuck with figuring out how to deal with it and having to pay for it," Galvin said. "I'd rather that not happen."

Maine officials hope to establish a program that would encourage consumers to mail back unused drugs to be incinerated, and they want drug manufacturers to pay for it. But in February, according to a letter obtained by the Natural Resources News Service, PhRMA wrote that it was "opposed to the recommendation that manufacturers solely fund this approach."

Pistell and others would like to start taking back medicines, but, she said, "the state is not in a position to pay for it."

See - Pharmaceuticals in Waterways Raise Concerns.

When lab rats get sick - at the hands of the CSIRO ...

Under the Council's controversial recycled sewage proposal, Cooby Dam is to become a "living laboratory" for the CSIRO.

Makes you wonder what might happen if, at the end of all the testing of the recycled sewage, the CSIRO says - "we can't guarantee it is safe" (not that the Council seems to be asking for their or anyone else's guarantee on the safety of recycled sewage).

CSIRO abandons research into GM peas

PM - Friday, 18 November , 2005 18:42:00
Reporter: Paula Kruger


MARK BANNERMAN: It is an issue that has caused fierce debate among scientists, farmers and consumers - whether or not genetically modified food is bad for your health.

Adding fresh fuel to that debate is news today that the CSIRO has had to abandon 10 years of research into genetically modified field peas because it made mice sick.

The CSIRO says the result shouldn't cause alarm, because it shows that there are adequate measures in place to weed out defective GM crops.

But opponents of the technology say not all producers of GM products maintain the same high standards and that the long-term effects are still unknown.

Paula Kruger reports.

PAULA KRUGER: The field pea may sound like a humble little plant, but it's actually an important rotation crop for Australian farmers worth up to $100 million a year.

And when the CSIRO took on the task of genetically modifying it, they wanted to make a plant that was resistant to pea weevils, a pest known to decimate 30 per cent of crop yields.

So they created a new field pea by adding a protein found in Kidney beans that causes the weevil to starve to death.

But when they added kidney bean DNA to encourage the field pea to create the protein itself, the humble sounding plant had its own ideas and made a different protein.

The result was a product resistant to insect attack, but when it was fed to mice in small quantities over a few weeks, it made them sick.

Deputy Chief of CSIRO Plant Industry Dr T J Higgins.

T J HIGGINS: The mice responded, not in a life-threatening way, these tests showed that there was inflammation of their lungs, which means that white blood cells go to that point of stress in the lung tissue.

KAREN KRUGER: So we can assume that it was something that affected the immune system?

T J HIGGINS: That's right. Absolutely.

PAULA KRUGER: Dr Higgins says he is very disappointed his team couldn't create a safe pest resistant field pea and says this rarely happens.

T J HIGGINS: There has been one other case that has occurred during the 10 or 15 years that genetic modification has been going on. That was a case where a gene was being transferred from Brazil nuts into soybeans to improve the protein quality of soybeans for feeding animals. Most proteins do not change when they're transferred.

PAULA KRUGER: The CSIRO has tried to spin a positive out of the failed project by saying it shows that measures designed to protect the public from unsafe GM products are effective.

But that is not the view of Dr Judy Carmen the Director of the Institute of Health and Environmental Research.

JUDY CARMEN: First of all, I think the people who did this study should be congratulated, because this is the kind of study that should be done on all GM foods.

And the study was done with the CSIRO, but it was particularly done at the John Curtin School of Medical Research and they have done a very good study here.

One of the problems with this study is that, as I said, it hasn't actually been done with other GM foods and needs to be done.

So while Dr T J Higgins is saying that this shows that the regulatory process is working, unfortunately it doesn't, because this pea has never made it to the regulatory process.

PAULA KRUGER: So you fear that there's probably other genetically modified products out there that, like this field pea, would fail the test if it went through animal testing?

JUDY CARMEN: Yes. There very well could be and I think that we do need to have very thorough safety testing done on animals.

PAULA KRUGER: The feeling among farmers is mixed. The Farmers Federation grains group in Victoria say they're disappointed the field pea project had to be scrapped but that it shouldn't diminish the public's confidence in GM technology.

But Julie Newman, a Western Australian farmer and spokeswoman for the Network of Concerned Farmers doesn't share their confidence and says some farmers are finding it hard to remain GM free.

JULIE NEWMAN: We haven't got a choice at the moment. The Government has decided that we are to accept contamination in our non-GM products.

Now, if the health testing down the track becomes obvious that there is a problem, we can't recall this product, and that's the problem.

We want to be able to market as non-GM, or GM-free, which legally means no-GM, because consumers don't trust the regulatory process at the moment.

PAULA KRUGER: The CSIRO says it will ensure its failed field pea doesn't cause any more problems. It plans to incinerate or bury its 12 tonne crop.

MARK BANNERMAN: Paula Kruger reporting.

See - My lab rat got sick.

You can't incinerate or bury Cooby Dam if they get it wrong ...