Perth
Water access and use

Water rights, entitlements, allocations and restrictions

Introduction

This note provides information about the water access rights granted by jurisdictions to the users of the region's water resources and the associated allocation announcements and abstractions.

The 2014 Account acknowledges that the legislative water resource management frameworks relating to Australian water rights vary greatly across jurisdictions, sometimes making comparisons difficult. To facilitate meaningful comparisons between the water accounting reports included in the 2014 Account, the Bureau of Meteorology has developed and applied an accounting concept to classify and report water entitlements within a water asset/water liability framework.

According to that framework, water rights for the Perth region for the 2013–14 year have been classified as shown below.

 

Surface water rights

In the Perth region, surface water allocations for individual users and the urban water system are equal to 100% of the water access entitlement; however, allocations for the irrigation scheme are a percentage of the entitlement, which are announced at the start of the irrigation season on 1 October each year.

The volume of surface water entitlements, corresponding water allocations and volumes of abstraction for the 2013–14 year, compared to the previous two years, are shown in Figure 1. The percentage shows the ratio of abstraction to the water access entitlement.

Note that water allocations and abstractions related to the urban water system and irrigation schemes appear in the Surface water note; however, they do not appear in the water accounting statements because they are transactions that occurred within the region. These transactions did not impact the region's total water assets and water liabilities.

 

Figure 1  Graph of surface water access entitlements, allocations and abstractions in the Perth region for the years ending 30 June 2014, 2013 and 2012
Figure 1 Surface water access entitlements, allocations and abstractions in the Perth region for the years ending 30 June 2014, 2013 and 2012
 

 

Figure 1 shows that the allocation announcements for surface water diversion to individual users and the urban water system during the 2013–14 year remain relatively unchanged from the previous year. Due to increased availability of water in the irrigation supply storages, allocations to the irrigation scheme increased from the previous year by approximately 30%.

Surface water diversions to individual users, the urban water system and the irrigation scheme during the 2013–14 year all increased from the previous years.

It should be noted that surface water diversion to the urban water system is a gross volume, that is, a portion of this water is made up of groundwater and desalinated water transferred from the urban water supply system in order to store winter production of desalination water and groundwater. Net surface water diversion to the urban water system during the 2013–14 year (49,082 ML) is actually similar to previous years (see Urban water system note).

 

Groundwater rights

In the Perth region, groundwater allocations were equal to 100% of the water access entitlement.

The volume of groundwater allocation and abstraction for the 2013–14 year, compared to the previous two years, are shown in Figure 2. The percentage shows the ratio of abstraction to the allocation announcement.

Note that water allocations and abstractions related to the urban water system appear in the Groundwater note; however, they do not appear in the water accounting statements because they are transactions that occurred within the region. These transactions did not impact the region's total water assets and water liabilities.

 

Figure 2  Graph of groundwater allocations and abstractions in the Perth region for the years ending 30 June 2014, 2013 and 2012
Figure 2 Groundwater allocations and abstractions in the Perth region for the years ending 30 June 2014, 2013 and 2012

 

Figure 2 shows that the allocation announcements for groundwater extraction to the urban water system during the 2013–14 year decreased from the previous year. This decreasing trend of recent years coincides with the increased production of desalinated water to the urban water system and the recognition of the need to reduce extractions to a more sustainable level. Groundwater allocations for individual users was relatively similar to the previous year.

Groundwater extractions to the urban water system during the 2013–14 year decreased from the previous years; groundwater extractions to individual users marginally increased. The relatively high percentage of extraction to allocation for individual users is because the majority of individual licence holders abstractions are not measured and are assumed equal to the licence holders' allocations.

 

Water restrictions

During the 2013–14 year, urban-water users and garden-bore users were on a sprinkler roster.

Whilst on the sprinkler roster, urban-water users connected to the Perth region's Intergrated Water Supply Scheme can use their sprinklers two days per week. Residents with their own garden bore have an additonal sprinkler day per week. The sprinkler days are determined by the last digit of the user's street number and sprinklers must be used before 9am and after 6pm. There is a total sprinkler ban for the winter months (June–August).

This current water restriction has been in place in the region since November 2010. For more information, refer to the Bureau of Meteorology's Water restriction website.

 

Water market activity

Table 1 shows the trades and transfers of licence entitlements that occurred in the Perth region during the 2013–14 year. All of these entitlement transfers occurred within the same surface water or groundwater management area (see the Trades and water rights transfers section in the 'Contextual information').

 

Table 1  Information on the surface water and groundwater trade in the Perth region during the 2013–14 year
Transaction

Transaction type

Number of licences

Volume

(ML)

surface water entitlement transactions within region

 

trade

 1

41

transfer

 3

21

groundwater entitlement transactions within region 

 

 

trade

45

706

transfer

92

3,682

agreement

32

4,207

Total

 

173

8,657



In Western Australia, trades and transfers are defined as water entitlements that are permanently transferred to another licence holder. A trade is where the new licence holder will abstract water from a different location; a transfer is where water abstraction will occur from the same location. An agreement is a temporary transfer of a licence water entitlement to another licence holder (also referred to as a temporary transaction).

More information on water entitlement transactions can be found on the Department of Water website.

Most of the water market activity within the Perth region during the 2013–14 year was related to groundwater entitlement trade. This is in contrast to the previous year, where most of the water market activity related to surface water trade between Harvey Water Irrigation Cooperative and Water Corporation. Trade between these two organisations did not occur during the 2013–14 year. 

 

Water use

Economic, social and cultural benefit

Surface water and groundwater resources within the Perth region are used for public water supply, irrigation scheme supply, as well as private water supply for purposes such as agriculture, industry, and mining. For a summary of the water volumes allocated for various economic purposes within the region, including the actual volumes abstracted, refer to Surface water rights and Groundwater rights above.

Water is released from Harvey Reservoir during the irrigation season (generally November–May) to ensure that there is flow along Harvey River downstream of the reservoir. Along with irrigation supply and environmental requirements, it is considered important that Harvey River has flow for aesthetic reasons, primarily because this region of the Harvey River is a tourist precinct.

Water regimes required to support cultural values are not quantitatively defined in allocation plans (see the Cultural water management section of the 'Contextual information'); however, the cultural values are considered within the environmental water provisions.

 

Environmental benefit

Introduction

Water for environmental benefit in the Perth region is provided according to two different environmental water management scenarios:

  • planned, partly regulated surface water
  • planned groundwater.

 

Planned, partly regulated surface water

The dominant feature of environmental water management in this scenario is the ability to control or influence flow by operational releases from storages. For the Perth region, these environmental water releases are also referred to as riparian releases.

Environmental water legislation

Environmental water provisions in the Perth region are currently only defined for the Canning River. These provisions are outlined in the Middle Canning River Surface Water Allocation Plan.

The plan outlines a flow regime required to maintain current ecological conditions in the lower Canning River. These ecological requirements were developed by Radin et al. (2010), and include the maintenance of:

  • flow connectivity
  • pool depth as refuge habitat
  • a minimum flow over riffles for macro-invertebrates
  • prevention of anoxic conditions in pools.

Environmental releases are also made from other rivers and storages in the region (e.g., Serpentine River and Wungong Brook) but there are no statutory requirements associated with these releases.

Environmental water provisions

Environmental water releases are made during the drier months between November and May from surface water storages and water mains along the Canning River. There are six release points along the river, and these releases make up most of the river's summer baseflow. The location of these release points are given in Chapter 5 of the Middle Canning River Surface Water Allocation Plan.

The Water Corporation operates the storages and manages the release of water from the environmental release points. The Department of Water monitors the flow along the Canning River at the Seaforth gauging station (Station 616027: see Figure 1 in the 'Quantification approaches' note for location) to ensure that adequate baseflow is being maintained.

Figure 3 shows the required flow regime at the Seaforth station throughout the standard summer-flow release period. The release schedule commences when flow at the Seaforth station falls below 9.3 ML/day for 3 consecutive days in late spring. Once started, the releases must meet the required flow threshold, that is, the minimum daily flow measurement at the Seaforth gauging station must remain above 1.8 ML/day during the summer period. Releases are ceased when 40 mm of rainfall are recorded after 1 April at the Bureau of Meteorology's Gosnells weather station.

 

Figure 3  Example water provisions for the Canning River; required baseflows and higher flow pulses are also shown
Figure 3 Example water provisions for the Canning River; required baseflows and higher flow pulses are also shown

 

In addition, there is also provision for up to three higher volume 'pulse' flows to aid upstream fish migration during summer. These pulse flows are scheduled to occur between November and January, and are generally initiated when flow at the Seaforth gauging station is less than 9.3 ML/day for 15 consecutive days (Figure 3).

A more detailed description of these environmental water release schedules are provided in Appendix B of the Middle Canning River Surface Water Allocation Plan, including variations to the release schedule for low rainfall years.

Environmental water outcomes

The mean daily flow at the Seaforth gauging station along the Canning River during the summer period for the 2013–14 year is shown in Figure 4.

 

Figure 4  Graph of the daily flow in the Canning River compared with the required flow regime during the 2013–14 year
Figure 4 Daily flow in the Canning River compared with the required flow regime during the 2013–14 year

 

Figure 4 shows that flow in the Canning River exceeded the minimum baseflow requirements for the entire summer period. The summer-flow release schedule for the Canning River commenced on 1 November 2013 after three consecutive days of less than 9.3 ML/day of flow was observed at the Seaforth station. The release schedule ceased on 7 May 2014 when cumulative rainfall (since 1 April) at Gosnells weather station exceeded 40 mm.

Figure 4 also shows that a higher volume pulse flow event occurred between 30 November–2 December 2013 (3-day duration). According to the environmental water provisions (see Figure 3), higher volume pulse flows are generally initiated when flow in the river is less than 9.3 ML/day for 15 consecutive days. Aside from the pulse flow event on 30 November 2013, flow in the Canning River was below 9.3 ML/day for the entire November–January period but no additional higher volume pulse flows occurred.

 

Planned groundwater

In the Perth region, limiting the groundwater extractions is the main instrument used to meet the requirements of the groundwater-dependent ecosystems. The Department of Water consider the water requirements of groundwater-dependent ecosystems when setting limits to groundwater extractions in the allocation planning process.

Environmental water legislation

Environmental water provisions in the Perth region are currently defined for the Gnangara and Jandakot groundwater systems. These provisions are now ministerial guidelines under the Western Australian Environmental Protection Act 1986 and are based on water level criteria set for representative sites in the area. The Department of Water monitors these sites to determine compliance with criteria; however, no information about the environmental water outcomes was available to be included in this report.