Mon. Jul 1st, 2024
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Australia’s water minister, Tanya Plibersek, has hinted major water-savings deadlines in the Murray-Darling Basin Plan could be extended beyond 2024, as New South Wales claims it has won a commitment for “greater flexibility” to deliver one of the country’s biggest environmental reforms.

Speaking at Canberra’s Parliament House following a meeting of state and territory water ministers, federal water minister Ms Plibersek said the Commonwealth remained committed to delivering the legislated plan.

“What’s not up for negotiation is our full delivery of the Murray-Darling Basin Plan,” Ms Plibersek said.

“We absolutely have to get there … I’m flexible about how we get there, but we will have to get there.”

However, Ms Plibersek would not say if she now expects the plan to be completed by its June 2024 deadline.

Federal water minister Tanya Plibersek
Federal water minister Tanya Plibersek has asked basin officials to report to ministers in February about how the Murray-Darling Basin Plan can be achieved.(ABC News: Nick Haggarty)

“I’m pushing for 2024 implementation, but I’m acknowledging that it’s hard to get there … we need a pathway to get getting to the full implementation of the Murray-Darling Basin Plan.

“I have to take into account, realistically, what states and territories are saying to me, but I’m not taking my foot off the accelerator just yet.

“We’ve got a work program between now and the next Minister’s Council, which will be early next year, which will flesh out how we intend to deliver on those [water-saving] targets, but deliver we must.”

The ministers are now expected to meet in February when a decision on extending the basin plan could be negotiated.

Hundreds of gigalitres unrecovered

With less than two years until water savings must be reconciled, hundreds of gigalitres are yet to be recovered for the environment as set out in the plan.

Victoria and New South Wales have repeatedly, and so far unsuccessfully, pushed for deadline extensions.

South Australia used Wednesday’s meeting to request federal funding for on-farm water-saving projects and Commonwealth water buybacks to meet the water-saving targets.

Buybacks haven’t happened in Australia for almost a decade and, like on-farm water-saving projects, were opposed by the former federal Coalition government.

The Murray-Darling Basin Plan sets out how water in Australia’s largest river system is shared between farmers, communities and the environment.

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