MUNGO MACCALLUM. The Basin plan has become a Basin scam

If you take half the water out of a river, it will affect the river.

This is not rocket science, or even normal logic; it is a statement of the bleeding obvious. To pretend that you can leech out the headwaters of the Murray Darling Basin for years and go on with business as usual is not merely absurd, but bordering on insanity.

But we must assume that the politicians and bureaucrats who administer (or maladminister, as Royal Commissioner Brett Walker has found) the  Basin Authority are not insane – at least, not all of them. However, nor are the vast majority 0f scientists, and, so they have been forced into the position where, as Walker puts it, “the fiction that a political compromise is science.”

The 2007 management plan was precisely that – a fix to manage the apparently intractable competing needs of agriculture and the environment. And as is generally the case, the environment lost.

The previous federal minister, the unlamented Barnaby Joyce, was quite clear about it: bugger the law,  he would always prioritise the irrigators, and he did so in a ruthless regime that allowed them, and even encouraged them, to steal whatever water they felt appropriate. Thus the Basin Plan became the Basin Scam, with the results we have seen last week.

Joyce’s successor David Littleproud and his New South Wales counterpart Niall Blair are  firmly in denial: the massive fish kills in the Darling and now the Murrumbidgee had nothing to do with the plan, they insist: it was all about the drought. And of course the drought was the trigger.

But this is precisely the point: we have had droughts before and will have them again – and more frequent and severe as climate change kicks in. And knowing that, if we are to avert ecological disasters on the scale we have been watching on television, taking serious long term measures to keep the system viable will need a rethink.

The science is clear: in 2012, one of the many enquiries found that an extra 4000 gigalitres must be set aside for the environment. This was not an ambit claim: it was the minimum required by the scientists.

But the beleaguered Gillard government refused, and told the Authority to go away and come back with a figure of a 2 in the front of it.. This, we were told, would save 200 jobs in the irrigation areas.  And it may have – but the real question is whether those jobs were saving at the expense of the rivers. Jobs can be moved; rivers cannot.

The Act setting up the Authority mandates “an environmentally sustainable level of take,” but those responsible for enforcing it chose, under considerable pressure, instead to look at a way of making all the stakeholders happy —  a Pollyanna approach which was clearly impossible and, Walker, says, unlawful. Blair and Littleproud, and other politicians, would prefer to dismiss the reality; but the facts are undeniable.

The Darling is in deep trouble – or more accurately very shallow trouble and  action is imperative and urgent. The science must be part of the answer, but so must the politics – the whole point of politics is to resolve conflicting agendas and arguments,  not to paper them over but to look for the best outcome.

And no one can pretend that millions of dead fish is the ideal solution.

Comments

3 responses to “MUNGO MACCALLUM. The Basin plan has become a Basin scam”

  1. Chris Blaikie Avatar

    I would (and have) argued that it was always a scam….and never was it going to work.
    For years I have suggested blowing up the locks and weirs.

    Interestingly this article by aquatic scientist and researcher Martin Mallen-Cooper pretty well suggests that. 🙂
    Murray Darling Basin drought myth disservice to environmental progress https://www.theland.com.au/story/5403621/drought-myth-holds-murray-darling-back/?cs=4763

  2. Malcolm Crout Avatar
    Malcolm Crout

    Well said and the tragedy is that we are now witnessing finger pointing from those responsible.
    People, including Administrators and a disgraced former Minister have broken the law. If I cleared native vegetation the law would be dropped on me like a bomb and I would be held responsible, with at least a hefty fine and worst imprisonment.
    What will happen to these law breakers? Who will stand up for the environment?

  3. Ted Trainer Avatar

    Well put Mungo. The whole affair demonstrates two fundamental points that will not be faced up to. The first is that growth and greed society has far overshot sustainable limits. The scientists have told us the river needs 4000 – 7000 GL returned. So we either deal with that or watch the river continue to die. Secondly, we are incapable of dealing with it sensibly. That would involve paying an astronomical cost to relocate and look after all the farmers and towns that should never have been there, in ways that share the burden justly. But that’s not how we operate in winner-take-all society.