Of the 30 species of native fish in the Murray-Darling system, 16 are
now threatened and one, the trout-cod, is rated as critically endangered.
Like the coal-miner’s canary, the fish are telling us the water is no
longer healthy enough for them to live in.
We also have a $10 billion irrigation industry that depends on drawing
water from the rivers of the Murray-Darling system. In turn it supports
Australia’s largest employer, the food manufacturing industry. We have
households which need water, factories and mines which use it to produce
goods for export and domestic use, power stations which need it to
generate electricity. We have parks, gardens and ovals that need watering.
And we have the rivers and plains themselves, with all their native
species and farmed livestock, needing water.
The rivers helped build Australia’s prosperity. They have also shaped
our national character. They embody the values of traditional aboriginal
society, the pioneers who settled the countryside, the hard-working small
communities that enabled it to prosper. They forged the deep love which so
many of us feel for the Australian landscape and its unique plants and
animals.
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These are the values we need to discuss, as a community, as we try to
work out what to do about our rivers and landscape.
Do we want a pristine ecosystem, but few jobs and little prosperity? Do
we want short-term wealth but a desolate landscape and dead rivers? Can we
strike a balance, somewhere in between?
The Murray’s backward flow reminds us that time is running out, both
to have this discussion, and to start working out solutions. We need to
talk to one another as a community, as we have never talked before.
At the moment we’re mostly yelling at one another – greenies,
farmers, tourism operators, small communities, politicians. We’re not
listening very well to one another’s needs and values. So, besides
listening to what our landscape is saying, we also need to listen to each
other.
There is no single, simple solution. The flow regimes in a great river,
like the Murray or the Darling, are quite different in the upper, middle
and lower reaches. The landscapes and industries that depend on those
flows have differing needs. But every upstream action has a downstream
consequence.
The river flowed backward and the Murray mouth may close in future, to
the detriment of many communities and industries as well as the
environment, because there is no longer enough water to go round.
Eventually, Adelaide may find its water unsuited for domestic use.
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Can we, as we have done in the grape industry, devise a way to get the
same amount of production and prosperity with half the water? Can we teach
Australians to be more sparing in their water use? Can we save and use the
water that now flows to waste off roads and streets? Can we recycle water
in our homes and cities? Can we water the bush and our farms more
frugally, yet productively? Can we farm more native species profitably,
because they suit the landscape and use less water?
The answer to all these questions is: "Yes, we can." The
technology to achieve these things is either being developed, or else has
been shown by science to be possible. There are many options.
Our rivers and landscape face a slowly-emerging crisis, and we need
first to recognise that. But crisis also spells opportunity. It spells
concerted action by governments, industries and communities. It spells
resilience and imaginative solutions. It spells new roads to prosperity,
arising out of the solutions we develop.
In barely 20 years one third of all the world’s people and nations
will face severe water scarcity. If Australians can solve our challenge
first, we can help them to solve theirs. Then we will have a more
sustainable humanity on a more sustainable planet.