Melbourne Water


Melbourne Water is a Victorian government owned statutory authority that controls much of the water system in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, including the reservoirs, and the sewerage and drainage system that services the city.
Melbourne Water was formed by the merger of Melbourne and Metropolitan Board of Works and a number of smaller urban water authorities in 1992. Melbourne Water primarily operates under the Water Industry Act 1994 and the Water Act 1989.

Overview

Melbourne Water is wholly owned by the Victorian State Government. It manages Melbourne's water supply catchments, sewage, rivers and major drainage systems throughout the Port Phillip and Westernport region.
Governance of Melbourne Water is by an independent Board of Directors in conjunction with the Minister for Water.
Melbourne Water supplies water to the metropolitan retail water businesses, other water authorities, local councils and the land development industry. The Victorian Water Industry Association is the peak industry association for water companies in Victoria.
In 1994, Melbourne Parks and Waterways was separated from Melbourne Water, and became part of Parks Victoria in 1996.

Victorian Desalination Plant

The Victorian Desalination Plant is a A$3.1 billion desalination plant that was built in the Wonthaggi region of the Bass Coast. The plant can provide an additional 150 gigalitres of water each year. The base fee payable to the owner of the plant, even if no water is ordered, is $608 million a year, or $1.8 million per day, for 27 years. being between $18 and $19 billion in total. On 1 April each year, the Minister for Water places an order for the following financial year, up to 150 gigalitres a year, at an additional cost to Melbourne Water and consumers.

Northern Sewerage Project

Northern Sewerage Project is a major infrastructure project to increase the capacity of the sewerage system in Melbourne's growing northern suburbs. It will also help protect the Merri and Moonee Ponds Creeks by virtually eliminating sewage overflows that can occur after heavy rain.

Water restrictions

Melbourne Water has a system of restrictions to manage water supplies into the future. It reports on storage levels on Thursday each week while an interactive graph compares actual use. Further reviews of restrictions were needed to counter an ongoing drought, poor rainfall, record low storage levels and rising water use compared with past years.

Infrastructure

The water supply system operated and managed by Melbourne Water comprises:
Melbourne Water manages the ten Melbourne reservoirs. The total storage capacity is 1,810,500 megalitres.
ReservoirCapacity Year completedLocation
Thomson1983
Sugarloaf1981
Cardinia1973
Greenvale1971
Tarago1969
Upper Yarra1957
Silvan1932
O'Shannassy1928
Maroondah1927
Yan Yean1857

Water supply catchments

Around 80% of Melbourne's water is sourced from uninhabited forests in the Yarra Ranges and Central Highlands. In excess of 1,570 square kilometres is reserved for water catchment. These forests primarily consist of Mountain Ash. Catchment areas have been closed to the public for over 100 years.
CatchmentArea Inflow Comment
Thomson4870035.3mainly State Forest and a small section within Baw Baw National Park
Upper Yarra3367018.7within the Yarra Ranges National Park
O'Shannassy1187011.4within the Yarra Ranges National Park
Maroondah1654010.8within the Yarra Ranges National Park
Sugarloaf010.7water is pumped from the Yarra River and fully treated
Yarra Tributaries134803.8Armstrong, Cement, McMahons and Starvation Creeks
Wallaby91001.9within the Kinglake National Park
Total92.6

In addition to the reservoirs in the table above, water is harvested via a number of diversion weirs:
Clearfell logging is permitted in the Yarra Tributaries and Thomson catchment areas. Some studies claims this reduces Melbourne's water supply arguing that young regrowth forest uses more water than existing forest Some environmental groups claim that up to 30 thousand megalitres of water could be saved per annum by phasing out logging. This represents 6% of Melbourne's annual usage.