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28-09-2012, 04:55 PM | #31 | ||
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Location: Country Vic.
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http://www.g-mwater.com.au/
Check out the storage in Country Vic. If we get big spring rains we are screwed! |
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28-09-2012, 05:37 PM | #32 | ||
Performance moderator
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Do they have desalination plant too ??
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28-09-2012, 05:56 PM | #33 | ||
Regular Member
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Location: Country Vic.
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No, we leave them for the guns down in the deep south.
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28-09-2012, 06:28 PM | #34 | |||
I was correct - AGAIN
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Location: Third rock from the sun
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28-09-2012, 07:13 PM | #35 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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Location: GEELONG
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this one is for Geelong we are currently sitting at 96.4 but that is not counting in todays rain
http://www.barwonwater.vic.gov.au/learning/storages
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29-09-2012, 12:04 AM | #36 | ||
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In general to those who are desalination critics?
This one's for you...... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hgukduYJZ44 |
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29-09-2012, 09:54 AM | #37 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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Location: Melb north
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29-09-2012, 11:39 AM | #38 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Victoria
Posts: 1,138
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I grew up in the country, outside the reaches of 'town supply' water, therefore we were always on water restricted tank supply. When I came to Melbourne in the Early 1990s, I was shocked at the amount of wasted water and even more amazed at the lack of local govt support for household water tanks. Back then they were more worried about losing money from water that was state owned.
I watched with interest when Steve Bracks visited his homelands in the Middle East and toured desal plants. I was worried that he would get tunnel visioned in that direction at all taxpayers expense, all the while ignoring other more viable ( and MUCH MUCH cheaper) options. A few examples are a dam on the very flood prone Mitchell river ($1.5b) or an even more extreme idea to pipe water from Lake Cethana in Tassie ($2.5b)!!!! But in 2006 he won the election again on the back of promises like No Desal plant and No North south pipeline Now the North south pipeline is sealed shut at both ends, never to flow again. Thanks for that. There goes &750 million that we didn't need. We have a Desal plant that not only blew out in cost to around $3.5 billion but will use a huge amount of electricity (Remember that Carbon Tax??) On top of that cost is the ongoing cost of paying around $650 million a year to Aquasure (Desal plants owners) for "annual service" payments! AND thats only if we don't use any water!!!! If we do, then its around $750 million. So, its cost us a BAT load, will continue to cost us a BAT load, wether we use it or not and its gonna chew a BAT load of power too. Can someone please run this one by me again... Check this guy out : http://topher.com.au/videos.html
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29-09-2012, 04:06 PM | #39 | |||
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Mate...I have one solution to all your concerns about water in Australia. Stop excessive population growth due to immigration in Australia. We have about 200,000+ new migrants every year into the driest continent. You cannot build dams quick enough to cover that growth. Only solution is a silver bullet...a desal plant near every major population center. Give me another option that is scaleable and not reliant on weather patterns and I'll wave the flag you choose to wave too? (By the way the link you posted is from a guy who thinks there is no energy cost in transporting water hundreds of kilometres to consumers) Last edited by zilo; 29-09-2012 at 04:19 PM. |
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29-09-2012, 04:20 PM | #40 | ||
Thailand Specials
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Centrefold Lounge
Posts: 49,549
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Makes you wonder if it would be a good idea or even possible to build new dams, then connect them all country wide together with a massive pipe line, so when it floods in a flood prone area or heavy rain seasons it goes all over the country.
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29-09-2012, 06:22 PM | #41 | ||||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Victoria
Posts: 1,138
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Quote:
Bit ridiculous what your saying really. Save water by stopping immigration? The worlds population, like Australia, is growing rapidly mate. If there is no room for them in their country, let them come here. As long as they do it legally, I've got no problem with that one. Hell, 95% of the people in Australia migrated here. Or had ancestors who did. Anyways, Back to topic before we get too far gone.... I'm not saying that Desal plants are bad. I think they are a very good solution in some cases, but not the be all and end all of water supply. In land-locked desert countries in the Middle East, I'm sure they are a life saving must have... but here in Melbourne, there were (and still are!!) much more viable cheaper options that could have been employed BEFORE we built a Desal plant. You say that we cannot build dams quick enough to keep up with population. Now while that may be true, but Victoria pretty much stopped altogether! Dams are just a part of a water supply solution. If the Pollies grew a pair and told the Greenies that no dams means no water, which means no people to look at the animals they are worried about, then we wouldn't have been in such trouble during our latest drought. Victoria probably does need a desal plant but did it really need to be built first? Or could we have tried something else instead?? Quote:
Basic law of nature mate. Water pressure. Get a whole heap of water up high, put a hose and tap on it. Turn the tap on and HEY PRESTO!!!! Water comes out. How do your magic desal bullets plan on transporting its already expensive to produce water to its millions of customers? Polystyrene cups????
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29-09-2012, 06:48 PM | #42 | |||
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but was knocked back by the council, told she would be fined if she did so. |
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30-09-2012, 01:50 PM | #43 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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Location: Victoria
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Quote:
He was fussy and didn't trust tap water on his flowers because of all the 'chemicals' the put in it!!! His words, NOT mine! So he applied numerous times to the council to be allowed to put in a rain water catch tank, for the sole purpose of watering his prized orchids. They turned him down every time, once giving the reason that he would 'hook it up to his toilet and use it to flush' !!!!
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30-09-2012, 05:29 PM | #44 | ||||
XY Falcon
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_________________ 1971 XY Falcon 500 |
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30-09-2012, 06:11 PM | #45 | ||
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IIRC desal plants last only 30 years? What happens then?
They use heaps of electricity we dont have, what it uses is at escalating costs with carbon taxes etc. As a result more power will be cut to residential areas due to shortages, because of this white elephant. The Mitchell dam would have been a far more practical and less costly solution. Why dont they make it compulsory for all new houses and buildings to be plumbed so all water from the roof is harvested into appropriate sized tanks, which are plumbed to toilets etc. so to minimise dependency on mains water? Not to mention the various recycled water schemes that appear to have ground to a halt. Ridiculous situation until the next drought when all of a sudden they start thinking of more ideas as the water levels go down again, when the population has increased significantly from what it is now. The time to act is NOW!! |
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30-09-2012, 08:22 PM | #46 | |||
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This threads topic is a political tool here in Victoria. Its helped along by the mainstream media... Just like everything else in countries like our own. Unfortunately we are bound by the people we elect. Maybe we can elect pollies that we can trust next time????
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01-10-2012, 01:55 AM | #47 | ||||||
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Surely you don't mean that any country that has irresponsible population policies should just send their overflow here? To the driest continent on earth? Quote:
Did you want to build another empty dam alongside it instead of a desal? Nobody knew we would have record rainfall as we have recently. Quote:
For a start there is a phenomenon called surface friction in the pipe which would defeat any height advantage you think you have in about 5 kilometres of pipe....unless you are using one 20 metres diameter? It takes a watt of energy to move water (1Kg) one metre in SI units. How many gigalitres and how many hundreds of kilometres did you say you want to move this water from tassie to where? Desal plants are placed close to population centres or existing reticulation systems to mitigate transmission losses. In Melbourne's case it was placed to work in conjunction with the Eastern waste treatment plant, thereby re using water over and over again. A dam can't do that on it's own.... Also....I don't suppose it matters that Tassie had water restrictions at the same time as melbourne does it ? Quote:
(Well it does in my domestic one that I put together.) Last edited by zilo; 01-10-2012 at 02:01 AM. |
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01-10-2012, 09:01 AM | #48 | ||||
Petro-sexual
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Melbourne
Posts: 4,527
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No matter the length of the pipe; If one end is higher than the other, water will flow. When you increase the height difference (pressure/velocity), the pipe's friction factor will be a factor in the final flow rate, but it will never stop it. Quote:
One side is wet, the other in drought. |
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01-10-2012, 02:06 PM | #49 | ||||
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A new dam is needed, it would let the thompson fill up and only be used in times of drought. If full it can hold enough water for 3 years. It takes an enormous amount of brown coal created power to process sea water. No living creature can survive in the area in the ocean that the desal plant dumps its salt. It is also an expensive little bugger. Once a dam is built it has little ongoing cost and environmental impact compared to a desal plant. Quote:
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01-10-2012, 02:10 PM | #50 | ||
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The government left it too long before acting on the water issue, that's why it panicked and implemented the "quick fix" desal plant and stupid pipeline.
Also the alliance to the greens didn't help. |
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01-10-2012, 04:45 PM | #51 | |||
I was correct - AGAIN
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Location: Third rock from the sun
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01-10-2012, 05:15 PM | #52 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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I'm with you on that one...Considering the two largest groups of immigrants are Poms and Kiwi's...Wait a sec, Poms don't bathe anyway
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01-10-2012, 05:16 PM | #53 | |||
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The things that irk me are paying so much extra in penalties to get it built in a hurry just so it can sit there for a few deacades until we need it.
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Oooh baby living in Miami....
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02-10-2012, 02:56 AM | #54 | |||||||
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It hasn't ever been this full in 30 years.... Quote:
I know that as a fact...I do it every summer without a single ounce of brown coal. It takes a huge amount of power to pump water from a dam too. Quote:
Hardly toxic by any stretch of the imagination. Quote:
You still need a huge piece of infrastructure to clean up the water from faeces and agricultural run off etc etc etc. part of the RO process is a 0.6 micron filter, even viruses don't get through that...result? less water treatment needed in terms of chlorination etc. Environmentally dams are not as lovely for the environment as you think, in fact a disaster due to disruption of environmental flows downstream...trees die, wildlife dies, salinity in the soil affected when it eventually rains....the list goes on.... Quote:
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02-10-2012, 09:28 AM | #55 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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02-10-2012, 06:31 PM | #56 | |||||
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Quote:
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Also the marine life have to swim in that extra 20% Quote:
BUT, if you add up the initial costs for the new dam plus the above and add it all up, it will not even come close to the initial cost of the desal. PLUS, we then have to pay millions each year even if its not producing water!!! I never said the desal plant was not needed for Victoria, I'm just saying that there were better, cheaper options.
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02-10-2012, 06:54 PM | #57 | ||
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I thought the desal energy requirement was going to be offset through purchasing renewable energy, is this still the case?
Whether we agree with it or not the new dam proposals were rejected on the grounds that they were considered too risky a solution over the long term. Some of the key factors which influenced that decision were Vic's unreliable, fluctuating rainfall and regular droughts, the forecast for reduced average runoff into the future and a growing population. Almost all of Melbourne's water is rainfall dependant, and considering the effects of the El Nino cycle, the government wanted to mitigate this risk by diversifying the water supply rather than investing in another river-based solution. Because there's always so many stakeholders (usually at odds with each other) in water issues it makes them pretty complicated. The 2005 SKM report commissioned by DSE looked at the Mitchell river scheme and found that the unmanageable costs - loss of productive farmland, impacts to agriculture/tourism/commerce downstream, heavy environmental/water quality consequences-especially to the Gippsland Lakes (which have internationally significant RAMSAR wetlands associated with them), displacing a couple of townships etc - were significant drawbacks that were just going to create as complex a set of problems as damming it might solve. Each country has it's own unique set of conditions and problems but there's a general trend away from building dams for water supply in many parts of the world for these and other reasons. The US for example are starting to decommission quite a few. Undertaking good water conservation strategies and reducing inefficiencies is usually more cost-effective than building new dams.
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02-10-2012, 08:59 PM | #58 | ||||||
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If you really want me to build you a deasal unit that doesn't work on electricity I can, simply build a wind turbine pumping water through a fibreglass mebrane instead of first converting wind power to electricity simply drive a mechanical pumpfor a RO plant and just make water directly. Reverse osmosis doesn't give a rats fart about how you drive the pressure pump....you can even get your donkey going around in circles driving the pump if you want. Good enough for you? Quote:
Too much Alan Jones me thinks... Quote:
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I am delighted to hear that you have some better solutions. Now let's hear about them please? |
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02-10-2012, 11:33 PM | #59 | |||
Petro-sexual
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Melbourne
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And before you try to argue about droughts, blah blah blah... If it is OK to base future choices on historical data of drought in VIC, then I'm sure it would be fine to base future choices on historical data from that dam and river system. (Goose - Gander) Just relying on gravity alone would pump more than double what the desal plant will produce, and that amount is very little of what naturally overflows from that dam out to sea. Lets not forget just how prone the Mitchell River is to flood, and how many times it did flood during the drought in Victoria. Agreed, the desal is not the worst idea ever, it would have been good if it could have tied in with the building of a Nuclear power plant and use the heated cooling tower water to aid in the desalinisation process. And the contracts for the plant could have been far better written and managed. But outside of that, there are two great ideas above that would cost less in the long run, and have historical data to back them up. |
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03-10-2012, 11:16 AM | #60 | ||||||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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Maybe you and your donkey could get a job turning the pumps at the desal??? Or you could build some of your amazing wind turbines and then power it with all the hot air thats pumping out your mouth? Quote:
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AND we don't have to pay MILLIONS for the water that comes from dams when they are producing. Quote:
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