Premier Anna Bligh warned about recycled water - it's time to be sensible ...
When the Toowoomba City Council advocated putting recycled water into the city's drinking water supply, they reluctantly agreed to a 3-5 year testing period before introducing it for potable reuse.
The Water Futures project was canned following the successful 'No' campaign in 2006.
And it is perhaps fortunate that it was canned as it would have most likely bankrupted the Garden City with poor budgeting, cost overruns, the need for evaporation ponds and an expensive 'edutainment' centre where the recycled water companies would have advertised their technology at ratepayer expense.
It really was Toowoomba's Bridge to Nowhere.
About the only benefit may have been the spin-off for the careers of the two main proponents of the project.
But that aspect was scuppered as well.
Now Anna Bligh seems hell-bent on pumping recycled water into Wivenhoe Dam.
And with no testing period.
Recent feedback on local radio in Brisbane shows how deeply unpopular Anna Bligh's decision will be.
And the outcry in the southern press is increasing.
The failure to include testing for a similar period to that proposed for the ill-fated Toowoomba scheme may be regarded by voters as reckless.
There is nothing to prevent Anna Bligh conceding that a lengthy testing period should be implemented.
And if Anna's recycled water is so wonderful, why would she be afraid of extensive testing?
The bulk of the recycled water will be pumped to the power stations.
Combined Brisbane dam levels are around 40% so Peter Beattie's Armageddon scenario is yet to materialise.
The Hinze Dam is almost full and the Gold Coast's desalination plant will soon come online.
There is clearly no great rush to pump recycled water into Wivenhoe Dam.
The only urgency seems to be coming from the Bligh government and the recycled water companies who want to get recycled water into the drinking water supply asap so they can declare it a fait accompli.
It's the Singapore model with just about the same level of democracy. But in Singapore it's only 1%.
The Bligh government risks an outbreak of anti-Labor sentiment at a time when Anna Bligh's popularity stakes are waning and the Labor Party is looking increasingly battered in most States and fairly incompetent in Canberra.
Sure she has a parliamentary majority which will probably survive a voter backlash and a swing to the LNP at the next election.
But can she be so sure?
Anna's PR spin team will no doubt be polling extensively on the issue over the next few months ...
4 Comments:
Once they get this recycled water into the dams one can be certain that our baby boom will go!
They will have to rely on immigration or southerns coming to Qld - and why would they want to!
Is this the govts way of stopping the South East growing, and saving the govt the problems of increasing State Govt infrastructure?
Seems like Premier Bligh is steering a sinking ship!!!
4:24 PM, October 29, 2008
Clearly there should be a testing period.
6:51 PM, October 29, 2008
Maybe she can follow our Pete and do a back flip and decide that they only need to use it for the power stations and industry. Just think they would not even need to process it to the level they are now working on as it would only need to be class A+ for that purpose. It could save a lot of money but they don't get to privatize the water and rob us blind.
8:33 PM, October 29, 2008
It is going into the power stations now - so why waste time and effort and the venom of the public bytrying to treat it to something else for people to drink - just remember that the recycled water will be coming through the same pipes as the current water to the power stations - which is not suitable for drinking.
Plese somebody take out a link
11:52 PM, October 29, 2008
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