Water-wise: Hinterland Environmental Water Scheme secretary Russell Joseph, board members Alana Jones and Allister Smith, and report co-author Steve Marshall stand over the pipeline at Dromana that daily carries millions of litres of treated wastewater to an ocean outfall near Gunnamatta. Picture: Yanni

PLANS to create a Hinterland Environmental Water Scheme (HEWS) to drought and bushfire-proof the Mornington Peninsula are a step closer with a pledge by returned Flinders MP Greg Hunt to commit $300,000 to the design of a business case.

The scheme proposes re-processing and using the average of 350 million litres of Class A water discharged each day from the South Eastern Outfall pipeline near Gunnamatta.

Original proponent of the scheme, Russell Joseph, said the water had been treated as “fit for purpose” for basic agricultural irrigation but was “largely a wasted resource”. He said a 2017-18 Melbourne Water annual report had shown that less than five per cent of the water was being re-used by third parties – such as farmers and firefighters.

Mr Joseph said the water scheme proposed re-processing the water to “an even higher standard to make it ethically and environmentally safe to be used on the high value soils of our hinterland and the lighter soils beyond”.

On the back of this federal commitment, the founders and co-authors of the HEWS have created a community led, not-for-profit incorporated association to manage the business case and feasibility study which is expected to lead to the eventual rollout of the pipeline infrastructure.

“The commitment from the federal government has given great impetus to the project and it is now time to incorporate the scheme as a genuine community-led-and-owned project,” Mr Joseph said.

“This scheme will bring a climate secure water supply to the peninsula – something no other irrigation region in Victoria has.”

Mr Joseph said expected a draft report on the scope of the HEWS business case could be released “in coming weeks”.

“The peninsula is home to some of the finest agricultural land in Victoria and, for the security of our green wedge, it simply makes sense to apply the right water, the right way, in the right locations to grow the best possible crops,” he said.

Mr Joseph urged the state government and Mornington Peninsula Shire to “join us in financially supporting this important and bi-partisan project”.

He said questions about salinity, regulation, soil degradation, crop type, financial cost and returns to

farmers had “all been addressed in the initial reports, but these need to be independently assessed and proven in the feasibility process”.

Co-author of the HEWS report Steve Marshall said: “It is important the community have confidence over how this project develops and is potentially rolled out.

“We have decided the best way to do this is to incorporate the HEWS and to give our community full transparency with a level of ownership and control over the outcomes.”

Mr Hunt said the money would assist locals in assessing the feasibility of the full project.

“This project has the potential to not only provide Class A treated water for our local farmers, but increased firefighting capacities in the Mornington hinterland during summer,” he said.

He said the project needed a bipartisan approach across all levels of government.

“I hope and call on both the shire and state governments to match this funding in line with their

previous statements,” Mr Hunt said.

Inaugural committee members of HEWS Inc are Russell Joseph, Steven Marshall, Alana Jones, Allister Smith and Christine Haydon.

Associate memberships are available. Details: Call Russell Joseph on 0414 398 586.

First published in the Southern Peninsula News – 4 June 2019

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