Part 1 Introduction
1 Name of Plan
This Plan is the Water Sharing Plan for the Jilliby Jilliby Creek
Water Source 2003 (hereafter this Plan).
2 Nature and status of this Plan
(1) This Plan is made under section 50 of the Water Management Act 2000 as amended
(hereafter the
Act).
(2) This Plan covers the core provisions of section 20 of the Act for
water sharing, and additional provisions of section 21 of the Act, and other
relevant matters.
3 Date of commencement
This Plan takes effect on 1 July 2004 and ceases 10 years after
that date.
4 Area to which this Plan applies
The area in respect of which this Plan is made is that area of
land within the Central Coast Water Management Area known as the Jilliby
Jilliby Creek Water Source (hereafter this water source) as shown on
the map in Schedule 2.Note. The Central Coast Water Management Area is shown in Appendix
1.
Note. Maps referred to in this Plan may be inspected at offices of the
Department of Land and Water Conservation listed in Appendix
2.
5 Waters to which this Plan applies
(1) The waters of this water source include all water occurring on the
land surface shown on the map in Schedule 2 including, but not limited
to:(a) all rivers in this water source including, but not limited to,
those nominated in Schedule 3, and
(b) all lakes and wetlands in this water
source.
(2) The waters of this water source exclude all water contained within
the aquifers underlying this water source.
6 Interpretation
(1) Terms that are defined in the Act have the same meaning in this
Plan and the effect of these terms may be explained in
Notes.
(2) Additional terms to those identified in subclause (1) are defined
in Schedule 1.
(3) Notes in the text of this Plan do not form part of this
Plan.
(4) Schedules to this Plan form part of this
Plan.
(5) Appendices to this Plan do not form part of this
Plan.
7 Effect on licences, authorities and permits under the
Water Act 1912
(1) This Plan applies from commencement to those matters that are
administered under the Act at that time.
(2) This Plan applies to other matters from the date the relevant
provisions of the Act are commenced.
Note. To the extent possible, the rules embodied in this Plan will apply
to matters administered under the Water Act
1912 in the interim.
8 State Water Management Outcomes Plan
(1) In accordance with section 16 (1) (a) of the Act, this Plan is
consistent with the State Water Management Outcomes Plan published in the NSW
Government Gazette on 20 December 2002 (hereafter the
SWMOP).
(2) Schedule 4 identifies the SWMOP targets applicable to this Plan
and how this Plan contributes to those targets.
Part 2 Vision, objectives, strategies and performance
indicators
9 Vision, objectives, strategies and performance
indicators
This Part is made in accordance with section 35 (1) of the
Act.
10 Vision
(1) The vision for this Plan is the sustainable, equitable and
efficient use, through integrated management, of water in the Jilliby Jilliby
Creek Water Source to preserve, enhance or rehabilitate the environmental,
social, cultural and economic uses of water for the present and
future.
(2) This Plan also recognises the following respect statement for
Aboriginal values in this water source:(a) life-giving water is of extreme significance to Aboriginal culture
for its domestic, traditional and spiritual values, and
(b) whilst water supplied for the environment will provide protection
for native flora and fauna, and also for fishing, food gathering and
recreational activities, it is important that the community respects the
spiritual significance of water to the Aboriginal
people.
11 Objectives
The objectives of this Plan are to:(a) protect natural water levels in pools, rivers and wetlands during
periods of no flows,
(b) protect natural low flows,
(c) protect or restore a proportion of moderate flows (freshes) and
high flows,
(d) maintain or restore the natural inundation patterns and
distribution of floodwaters supporting natural wetland and floodplain
ecosystems,
(e) maintain or imitate natural low flow variability in all
rivers,
(f) minimise the impact of in-river structures,
(g) maintain or rehabilitate downstream (including estuarine)
processes and habitats,
(h) maintain water supply to meet existing and potential basic
landholder rights requirements (for domestic and stock, and native title
rights), conditional on water availability,
(i) provide an agreed level of water sharing for agricultural and
industrial requirements, conditional on water
availability,
(j) maintain water supply to meet existing and potential domestic
needs of urban communities, conditional on water
availability,
(k) maintain water supply to meet the existing and potential
industrial and commercial needs of urban communities, conditional in water
availability,
(l) protect and enhance water dependent species and sites of
significance to the local Aboriginal communities in this water source,
and
(m) contribute to the achievement of water quality to support the
environmental values of this water source.
Note. This objective refers to maintaining water quality. Although there
are no specific strategies directly related to this objective in this Plan,
the environmental water provisions in this Plan make a positive contribution
to maintaining water quality.
12 Strategies
The strategies of this Plan are to:(a) establish cease (and commence) to pump levels and flow
classes,
(b) limit the amount of water that can be extracted on a daily basis
from different flow classes,
(c) limit the long-term average extraction of
water,
(d) clearly define access rules and conditions for extracting water
from this water source,
(e) establish rules for determining the water available from time to
time under access licences,
(f) establish water allocation accounting rules,
and
(g) specify access licence dealing rules that maximise flexibility for
water users without adversely impacting on this water
source.
13 Performance indicators
The following indicators are to be used to determine the
performance of this Plan against its objectives:(a) change in low flows,
(b) change in moderate to high flows,
(c) change in local water utilities and major water utilities access
(where those utilities are involved in urban water
provision),
(d) change in ecological condition of this water source and dependent
ecosystems,
(e) extent to which basic landholder rights requirements have been
met,
(f) change in economic benefits derived from water extraction and
use,
(g) extent to which native title rights requirements have been
met,
(h) extent of recognition of spiritual, social and customary values of
water to Aboriginal people, and
(i) (Repealed)
Note. Appendix 3 details the objectives to which these performance
indicators relate and the methods for assessing these
indicators.
Part 3 Basis for water sharing
14 Basis for water sharing
This Part is made in order to give effect to section 5 (3) of the
Act, and in accordance with sections 20 (2) (c) and 21 (e) of the
Act.
15 Climatic variability
(1) This Plan recognises climatic variability and therefore river flow
variability in this water source.
(2) To give effect to subclause (1), this Plan has provisions that
manage:(a) the sharing of water in this water source within the limits of
water availability on a long-term average basis, and
(b) sharing of the flows that occur in this water source on a daily
basis.
16 Extraction management unit
(1) The availability of water for extraction from this water source on
a long-term average basis will be determined at the level of an extraction
management unit.
(2) The extraction management unit of which this water source is part
is known as the Tuggerah Lakes Extraction Management Unit, and is shown on the
map in Schedule 5.
17 Flow classes
This Plan establishes the following flow classes as the basis for
sharing of daily flows:(a) very low flow class at or less than:(i) 0.5 megalitres per day (hereafter ML/day) in year 1 of this
Plan,Note. The 0.5 ML/day in subclause (a) (i) corresponds to the estimated
94th percentile of all days with flow, and is referred to as the
cease to pump on a falling river and the commence to pump on a rising
river.
(ii) 0.75 ML/day in year 2 of this Plan, andNote. The 0.75 ML/day in subclause (a) (ii) corresponds to the estimated
92nd percentile of all days with flow, and is referred to as the
cease to pump on a falling river and the commence to pump on a rising
river.
(iii) 1 ML/day from year 3 of this Plan,Note. The 1 ML/day in subclause (a) (iii) corresponds to the estimated
90th percentile of all days with flow, and is referred to as the
cease to pump on a falling river and the commence to pump on a rising
river.
Note. There is no A class in this water source.
(b) B class flows:(i) greater than 0.5 ML/day and at or less than 3.3 ML/day in year 1
of this Plan,
(ii) greater than 0.75 ML/day and at or less than 3.3 ML/day in year 2
of this Plan, and
(iii) greater than 1.0 ML/day and at or less than 3.3 ML/day from year 3
of this Plan,
(c) C class flows greater than 3.3 ML/day and at or less than 8
ML/day, and
(d) D class flows greater than 8 ML/day.
Note. The flow classes have been determined based on flow information
that inherently includes seasonal effects as well as evaporation and seepage
losses.
18 Flow reference point
For the purpose of this Plan, all flows referred to relate to the
estimated flows at the flow reference point at the downstream end of this
water source, as shown on the map in Schedule 2.
19 Determination of flow class
Announcement of daily flow classes will be made from time to time
by the Minister based on the flow at a flow gauging station, correlated to the
flow reference point established in clause 18.
Part 4 Environmental water provisions
20 Environmental water provisions
This Part is made in accordance with sections 5 (3) and 8 (1), 8
(2) and 20 (1) (a) of the Act.
21 Planned environmental water
(1) Planned environmental water is identified and established as
follows:(a) In very low flows, the flow occurring in this water source, minus
0.51 ML/day, minus the very low flow access permitted under clause 61A of this
plan.Note. 0.51 ML/day is the amount of water estimated at the commencement
of this Plan for basic landholder rights extraction.
(b) In B class flows, the flow occurring in this water source minus
1.51 ML/day.Note. This figure is amount of water estimated at the commencement of
this Plan for B class total daily extraction limit and basic landholder
rights.
(c) In C class flows, the flow occurring in this water source minus
2.51 ML/day.Note. This figure is amount of water estimated at the commencement of
this Plan for C class total daily extraction limit and basic landholder
rights.
(d) In D class flows, the flow occurring in this water source minus
3.51 ML/day.Note. This figure is amount of water estimated at the commencement of
this Plan for D class total daily extraction limit and basic landholder
rights.
(2) Planned environmental water is maintained as follows:(a) In very low flows:(i) the holders of access licences, excluding access licences listed
in Schedule 6, are not permitted any access,
(ii) access licence holders listed on Schedule 6 may have limited
access to very low flows in accordance with clause 61A,
and
(iii) persons exercising domestic and stock and native title rights may
take a combined total of up to 0.51 ML/day.
Note. In times of severe water shortage the Minister may issue an Order
under section 60 (2) of the Act which suspends the provisions of this Plan and
the priorities it establishes.
Note. The Minister may issue an Order under section 328 of the Act to
restrict the exercise of domestic and stock rights from this water source to
protect the environment for reasons of public health, or to preserve basic
landholder rights.
(b) In each of B class, C class and D class flows:(i) the holders of access licences have restricted access to water as
specified in clause 45,
(ii) persons exercising domestic and stock and native title rights may
take water, and
(iii) if the water taken under domestic and stock and native title
rights is assessed to be exceeding 0.51 ML/day in this flow class the access
to water for unregulated river access licences will be reduced in accordance
with clause 50 to maintain the environmental water in this flow
class.
(c) In all flow classes, limits are imposed on the availability of
water in accordance with clauses 35 and 37, that protect a proportion of
natural river flows for fundamental ecological needs from increases in
long-term water extraction.
Note. These rules protect the water for the environment by limiting both
the long-term extraction, and the rate of extraction of water in different
flow ranges, thereby achieving the objectives of this
Plan.
Note. This Plan recognises that the planned environmental water
provisions provide non-extractive benefits, including traditional Aboriginal
spiritual, social and cultural benefits, and improved water
quality.
22 Extraction by water supply work
Notwithstanding all other rights and conditions, extraction of
water from a river by an approved water supply work is permitted only if there
is visible flow in the river in the vicinity of the
work.
23 Planned environmental water
At the commencement of this Plan, there is no water committed for
specified environmental purposes in accordance with section 8 (1) (b) of the
Act.
24 Adaptive environmental water
(1) At any time an access licence holder may, by a process determined
by the Minister, commit all or part of their licence as adaptive environmental
water.
(2) The Minister may grant an access licence in a water source to
which this Plan applies if the licence is subject to an adaptive environmental
water condition and arises through water savings in the system made in that
water source as referred to in section 8C (1) of the
Act.
(2A) The Minister may change the category or subcategory of an access
licence in a water source to which this Plan applies if the licence is subject
to an adaptive environmental water condition that arises through water savings
as referred to in section 8D of the Act.
(3) At the commencement of this Plan there are no access licences
committed to an environmental purpose in accordance with section 8 (1) (c) of
the Act.
Part 5 Basic landholder rights
25 Basic landholder rights
This Part is made in accordance with sections 5 (3) and 20 (1) (b)
of the Act.
26 Domestic and stock rights
(1) At the commencement of this Plan the water requirements of holders
of domestic and stock rights are estimated to be a total of 0.51
ML/day.
(2) This Plan recognises that the exercise of domestic and stock
rights may increase during the term of this Plan.
Note. Increase in use of domestic and stock rights may occur as a result
of an increase in the number of landholdings fronting rivers and lakes in this
water source or as a result of an increase of the exercise of basic landholder
rights by existing landholders.
27 Native title rights
(1) At the commencement of this Plan there are no holders of native
title rights and therefore the water requirements for native title rights are
estimated to be a total of 0 ML/day.
(2) This Plan recognises that the exercise of native title rights may
increase during the term of this Plan.
Note. Increase in use of native title rights may occur as a result of
the granting of native title rights under the Commonwealth’s Native Title Act
1993.
28 Harvestable rights
The requirement for water under harvestable rights is the amount
of water owners of land are entitled to capture pursuant to the harvestable
rights Order published in the NSW Government Gazette on 23 March 2001 under
section 54 of the Act.
Part 6 Bulk access regime
29 Bulk access regime
(1) This Part is made in accordance with section 20 (1) (e) of the
Act.
(2) This Plan establishes a bulk access regime for the extraction of
water under access licences in this water source having regard to:(a) the environmental water provisions established under Part 4 of
this Plan,
(b) the requirements for basic landholder rights identified under Part
5 of this Plan, and
(c) the requirements for water for extraction under access licences
identified under Part 7 of this Plan.
(3) The bulk access regime established in subclause (2):(a) recognises the effect of climatic variability on the availability
of water as provided for under Part 3 of this Plan,
(b) establishes rules according to which access licences are granted
as provided for in Part 8 of this Plan,
(c) recognises and is consistent with limits to the availability of
water as provided for in Part 9, Division 1 of this Plan,
(d) establishes rules according to which available water
determinations are to be made as provided for in Part 9 Division 2 of this
Plan,
(e) establishes rules according to which access licences are managed
as provided for in Part 10 of this Plan, and
(f) establishes rules with respect to the priorities according to
which access licences are to be adjusted as a consequence of any reduction in
the availability of water as provided for in Parts 9 and 10 of this
Plan.
Part 7 Requirements for water under access
licences
30 Requirements for water under access licences
This Part is made in accordance with section 20 (1) (c) of the
Act.Note. The amount of water specified in this Part represents the total
volumes specified on access licences in this water source. It is not a
commitment to supply that water.
31 Estimate of water requirements
(1) It is estimated that at the time of commencement of Part 2 of
Chapter 3 of the Act in the area in respect of which this Plan is made, the
requirements identified for water for extraction under access licences within
this water source will total approximately 1,016 megalitres per year
(hereafter ML/yr).
(2) It is estimated that at the time of commencement of Part 2 of
Chapter 3 of the Act in the area in respect of which this Plan is made, there
will be several runoff harvesting access licences in this water source, that
will have their access licence share component expressed as the water that can
be extracted from time to time from the approved
works.
(3) This Plan recognises that the total requirements for water for
extraction within this water source may change during the term of this Plan as
a result of:(a) the granting, surrender, cancellation or non-renewal of access
licences, or
(b) variations to local water utility licences arising from sections
66 (3) or 66 (4) of the Act.
Part 8 Rules for granting access licences
32 Rules for granting access licences
(1) This Part is made in accordance with sections 20 (2) (b) and 63 of
the Act, having regard to the limits to water availability in this water
source and the need to protect the ecological health of the
river.
(2) Access licences may be granted in this water source subject to any
embargo on the making of applications for access licences made under Chapter 3
Part 2 Division 7 of the Act.
(3) The Minister should declare an embargo on the making of
applications for access licences in this water source, other than access
licences of the following kinds:(a) local water utility access licences,Note. Pursuant to sections 66 (3) and 66 (4) of the Act, the Minister
may also vary a local water utility’s share component at 5 year
intervals, or on application of the local water utility where there is a rapid
growth in population.
(b) domestic and stock access licences, or
(c) specific purpose access licences for which applications are
provided for under the regulations in accordance with section 61 (1) (a) of
the Act,
(d) unregulated river (Aboriginal cultural) access licences up to 10
ML/yr per application.
(4) In applying for a new access licence, the applicant must establish
the purpose and circumstance relating to that access licence, and that the
share and extraction components sought will be the minimum required to meet
that purpose and circumstance.
(5) Subclause (4) does not apply to an application for a new access
licence arising from:(a) section 61 (1) (c), of the Act, where the right has been acquired
by auction, tender or other open market process, or
(b) an access licence dealing.
(6) Any individual daily extraction limit (hereafter IDEL) granted in accordance with
this clause cannot exceed the IDEL initially assigned to an equivalent share
component for that category of access licence, as varied by clause
50.
(7) (Repealed)
(8) Runoff harvesting access licences may have the share component
expressed either as a volume in ML/yr or in terms of the amount of water that
can be extracted from time to time from specified
works.
Part 9 Limits to the availability of water
Division 1 Long-term average extraction limit
33 Limits to the availability of water
This Division is made in accordance with section 20 (2) (a) of the
Act.
34 Extraction management unit
Management of the long-term extraction of water in this water
source will be undertaken in the context of the Tuggerah Lakes Extraction
Management Unit (hereafter this
Unit) referred to in clause 16 (2).
35 Long-term average annual extraction limit
(1) For this unit there will be separate long-term average annual
extraction limits applying to extractions under:(a) basic landholder rights and access licences, other than those
local water utility or any future major utility access licences held by
Gosford and Wyong Councils, and
(b) local water utility or any future major utility access licences
held by Gosford and Wyong Councils (hereafter the
local water utility long-term average annual extraction
limit).
(2) The long-term average annual extraction limit established under
subclause (1) (a) is equal to the total of:(a) the sum of share components of access licences in the Jilliby
Jilliby Creek Water Source at the commencement of the Water Sharing Plan for Jilliby Jilliby Creek Water
Source 2003, excluding local water utility or any future major
utility entitlements held by Gosford and/or Wyong
Councils,
(b) an estimate of annual extraction of water under domestic and stock
rights and native title rights in the Jilliby Jilliby Creek Water Source at
the commencement of the Water Sharing Plan for
Jilliby Jilliby Creek Water Source 2003,
(c) the sum of share components of access licences not held by Gosford
and Wyong Councils, that have been issued for the purposes of stormwater
harvesting in the Unit, and
(d) the sum of share components of access licences granted under
clause 19 of the Regulation in all water sources, excluding local water
utility or any future major utility access licences granted to Gosford and/or
Wyong Councils.
(3) The local water utility long-term average annual extraction limit
established under subclause (1) (b) is equal to 36,750 ML/year minus:(a) the long-term average annual extraction under local water utility
or any future major utility access licences held by Gosford City Council
and/or Wyong Shire Council in the Gosford Extraction Management Unit,
and
(b) the long-term average annual extraction under local water utility
or any future major utility access licences held by Gosford City Council
and/or Wyong Shire Council in any groundwater source, where the groundwater
taken is not being passed through Mardi Water Treatment
Plant.
Note. Water flowing from Hunter Water Corp to Gosford/Wyong Councils
will be accounted against the local water utility LTAEL in the Tuggerah Lakes
EMU. Water transferred from Gosford/Wyong Councils to Hunter Water Corporation
will be accounted against the major utility LTAEL in the Hunter
EMU.
Note. The 36,750 ML/year figure is based on demand projections to 2013.
This is the expected date that releases will commence from Tillegra Dam and
upgrade works will be finalised for Grahamstown Dam. At this time operation of
the water supply system will vary and a number of relevant plan provisions
within the Water Sharing Plan for the Hunter Unregulated and Alluvial Water
Sources and this Plan will need to be reviewed to determine their
appropriateness in line with the new operations.
Note. Any groundwater extraction that is being passed through Mardi
Water Treatment Plant will effectively be counted as surface water extraction
against the LTAEL.
(4) After commencement of releases from Tillegra Dam or after 1 July
2013, whichever occurs sooner, the local water utility long-term average
annual extraction limits established under subclause (3) for this Unit will be
reviewed, taking into consideration:(a) instream habitat and estuary requirements, and
(b) local water utility long-term demand
requirements.
(5) The Minister may, amend the local water utility long-term average
annual extraction limit specified in subclause (3) in accordance with the
outcomes of the review specified in subclause (4).
(6) The Minister may amend subclause (1) (b) and the local water
utility long-term average annual extraction limit specified in subclause (3)
following the granting of access licences to Gosford or Wyong Councils for the
purpose of stormwater harvesting.
(7) The Minister may amend the local water utility long-term average
annual extraction limit specified in subclauses (3) in accordance with the
outcomes of the review specified in clause 36A (10) of this
Plan.
36 Variation of the long-term average annual extraction
limit
(1) The long-term average annual extraction limit for this extraction
management unit may be varied by the Minister following the purchase and
cancellation of an access licence in the extraction management
unit.
(2) The long-term average annual extraction limit for this extraction
management unit may be varied by the Minister if dealings under Part 11 of
this Plan result in issuing or cancellation of access licences in the
respective extraction management unit.
36A Compliance with the long-term average annual extraction
limit
(1) In this Unit the total water extractions under basic landholder
rights and access licences, other than local water utility or any future major
utility access licences held by Gosford City Council and Wyong Shire Council,
will be monitored each water year to determine if there is any growth in
volumes extracted above the long-term average annual extraction limit
established under clause 35 (2), based on comparison of the extraction limit
against the average extraction within this Unit over that year and the
preceding 2 years.
(2) For the purposes of auditing extraction against the long-term
average annual extraction limit established under clause 35 (2), the taking of
water pursuant to an access licence that has been committed as adaptive
environmental water pursuant to section 8C of the Act, shall not be accounted
for as extraction under subclause (1).
(3) For water sources in this Unit, if the 3 year average of total
water extractions under basic landholder rights and access licences, other
than local water utility or any future major utility access licences held by
Gosford City Council and Wyong Shire Council, exceeds the long-term average
annual extraction limit established under clause 35 (2) by 5% or greater, then
the available water determinations made for unregulated river access licences
under clause 37 (8) for the following water year shall be reduced by an amount
that is assessed as necessary by the Minister to return subsequent total water
extractions under basic landholder rights and access licences, other than
those held by Gosford and Wyong Councils, in this Unit to the long-term
average annual extraction limit.
(4) For water sources in this Unit if the 3 year average of total
water extractions under basic landholder rights and access licences, other
than local water utility or any future major utility access licences held by
Gosford City Council and Wyong Shire Council, is less than 95% of the
long-term average annual extraction limit established in clauses 35 (2), the
available water determinations made for unregulated river access licences
under clause 37 (8) for the following water year for unregulated river access
shall be increased to such an extent as to allow total water extraction under
basic landholder rights and access licences in this Unit to increase to the
respective long-term average annual extraction limit.Note. The effect of this subclause and clause 37 (8) is that available
water determinations for unregulated river access licences can never be
greater than 1 ML per unit share, except for the available water
determinations made for the first year of the Plan. Therefore this allows for
adjustment back towards 1 ML per unit share if a previous growth in use
response under 36A (3) resulted in extractions significantly below the
LTAAEL.
(5) Any reduction or increase to the available water determinations
made under clause 37 (8) for unregulated river access licences in the Ourimbah
Creek Water Source as a result of subclause (3) or (4) shall be equivalent to
the corresponding reduction or increase made to available water determinations
for unregulated river access licences in the Wyong River Water Source,
Tuggerah Lakes Water Source and the Jilliby Jilliby Creek Water Source and
should be repeated for each of the subsequent two water
years.
(6) The average annual volume of water taken under all local water
utility or any future major utility access licences, held by Gosford City
Council and Wyong Council, in any 10 consecutive water years in this Unit may
not exceed a volume equal to the respective long-term average annual
extraction limit specified in clause 35 (3).
(7) In this Unit the total water taken under local water utility or
any future major utility licences held by Gosford City Council and Wyong Shire
Councils will be monitored each water year to determine if there is any growth
above the local water utility long-term average annual extraction limit
established under clause 35 (3), based on a comparison of the long-term
average annual extraction limit against the average annual amount of water
taken within this Unit over a rolling ten year period commencing from the
start of this Plan, except where subclause (8)
applies.
(8) If the long-term average annual extraction limit specified in
clause 35 (3) is amended under clause 35 (5) then growth in the ‘water
taken’ above the respective local water utility long-term average annual
extraction limit specified in clause 35 (3) shall be determined based on a
comparison of the extraction limit against the average water taken under local
water utility or any future major utility access licences held by Gosford City
Council and Wyong Shire Council within the Tuggerah Lakes Extraction
Management Unit over a rolling ten year period commencing from the water year
in which the amendment was made.Note. The effect of subclause (8) is if a new long-term average annual
extraction limit for the local water utility is required after Tillegra Dam is
built within the term of this Plan then a new ten year rolling accounting
period will commence.
(9) For the purpose of assessing growth above the local water utility
long-term average annual extraction limit the water taken in the Tuggerah
Lakes Extraction Management Unit under local water utility or any future major
utility licences within these water sources will be determined as:(a) the water passing the outlet of Mardi Water Treatment Plant minus
any water passing the boundary meter from Gosford/Wyong Councils to Hunter
Water Corporation, plus
(b) any water passing the boundary meter from Hunter Water Corporation
to Gosford/Wyong Councils, plus
(c) water taken by any other local water utility infrastructure
nominated by Gosford and Wyong Water Supply Authority and agreed to by the
Minister.
(10) If monitoring of the water taken under local water utility or any
future major utility access licences held by Gosford City Council and Wyong
Shire Council indicates growth above the local water utility long-term average
annual extraction limit as specified in clause 35 (3), then a review shall be
undertaken which considers:(a) the Councils’ urban water supply requirements,
and
(b) the impacts associated with an increase to the respective local
water utility long-term average annual extraction
limit.
(11) The Minister may amend this clause to take account of access
licences issued for the purpose of stormwater
harvesting.
Division 2 Available water determinations
37 Available water determinations
(1) This Division is made in accordance with section 20 (2) (b) of the
Act.
(2) All available water determinations in these water sources shall be
expressed as either:(a) a percentage of the share component for all access licences where
share components are specified as ML/year, or
(b) megalitres per unit share for all access licences where share
components are specified as a number of unit
shares.
(3) An available water determination for each category of access
licence in these water sources should be made at the commencement of each
water year.
(4) The available water determination made at the commencement of each
water year for domestic and stock access licences in these water sources shall
provide an allocation of 100% of share components, except where the available
water determination is made under subclause (5).
(5) The available water determination made at the commencement of the
first year of this Plan, for domestic and stock access licences in these water
sources should be 200% of those licences share
components.
(6) The available water determination made at the commencement of each
water year for local water utility access licences in these water sources
should be 100% of those licences share components.
(7) If major utility access licences are established in these water
sources the available water determination made at the commencement of each
water year for major utility access licences should be 100% of those licences
share components.
(8) The available water determination made at the commencement of each
water year for unregulated river access licences in these water sources should
be equal to 1 megalitre multiplied by the number of unit shares in the share
component, or such lower amount as results from clause 36A (3) except where
the available water determination is made under subclause
(9).
(9) The available water determination made at the commencement of the
first year of this Plan, for unregulated river access licences in these water
sources, should be equal to 2 megalitres multiplied by the number of unit
shares in the share component.
Note. The effect of this clause and clause 37 (4) is that available
water determinations for unregulated river access licences can never be
greater than 1 ML per unit share, except for the available water determination
made for the first year of the Plan.
Part 10 Rules for managing access licences
Division 1 General
38 Rules for managing access licences
This Part is made in accordance with sections 20 (2) (b), 21 (a)
and 21 (c) of the Act, having regard to:(a) the environmental water rules established in Part 4 of this
Plan,
(b) requirements for water to satisfy basic landholder rights
identified in Part 5 of this Plan, and
(c) requirements for water for extraction under access licences in
Part 7 of this Plan.
Division 2 Water allocation account management
39 Individual access licence account management
rules
(1) Water taken from this water source, excluding that taken by local
water utility or any future major utility access licences, in any 3
consecutive water accounting years under an access licence may not exceed a
volume consisting of:(a) the water allocations accrued under the licence in those
years,
(b) plus any water allocations assigned from another licence by a
water allocation assignment under section 71G of the Act in those
years,
(c) plus any water allocations recredited in accordance with section
76 of the Act in those years, and
(d) minus any water allocation assigned to another licence, by a water
allocation assignment under section 71G of the Act in those
years.
(2) Notwithstanding subclause (1), water taken under an access licence
from this water source, excluding local water utility or major utility access
licences, in the first 3 water accounting yeas of this Plan may not exceed a
volume consisting of:(a) 3 times the share component of the access
licences,
(b) plus any water allocations assigned from another licence by a
water allocation assignment under section 71T of the Act in those
years,
(c) plus any water allocations recredited in accordance with section
76 of the Act in those years, and
(d) minus any water allocation assigned to another licence, by a water
allocation assignment under section 71T of the Act in those
years.
(3) Water allocation in the accounts of local water utility or major
utility access licences shall not be permitted to be carried over from one
water year to the next.
40–43 (Repealed)
Division 3 Sharing flows on a daily basis
44 Sharing flows on a daily basis
This Division is made in accordance with sections 20 (2) (b) and
21 (a) of the Act.
45 Total daily extraction limits
(1) This Plan establishes a total daily extraction limit (hereafter
TDEL) for each flow
class as follows:(a) 0 ML/day for the very low flow class,
(b) 1 ML/day for B class,
(c) 2 ML/day for C class, and
(d) 3 ML/day for D class.
Note. These flows represent 45% of the top of B class flows, 31% of the
top of C class flows and in D class flows 29% of the 30th
percentile flows of all days of flow.
(2) The TDEL for each flow class specified in subclause (1) applies to
all rivers within this water source apart from those rivers identified as
minor streams in a harvestable rights Order made under section 54 of the
Act.Note. The harvestable rights Order applying to this area at the
commencement of this Plan is that gazetted on 23 March 2001 under section 54
of the Act. It identifies minor streams as non-permanent 1st and 2nd order
streams as shown on topographic maps.
46 Initial assignment of the TDEL to categories of access
licence
The TDEL for each flow class will initially be assigned to
categories of access licences according to the following:(a) Local water utility access licences:(i) 0.0 ML/day of B class,
(ii) 0.0 ML/day of C class, and
(iii) 0.0 ML/day of D class.
(b) Domestic and stock access licences:(i) 0.04 ML/day of B class,
(ii) 0.04 ML/day of C class, and
(iii) 0.04 ML/day of D class.
(c) Unregulated river access licences:(i) 0.96 ML/day of B class,
(ii) 1.96 ML/day of C class, and
(iii) 2.96 ML/day of D class.
47 Unassigned TDEL
At the commencement of this Plan, there is no unassigned
TDEL.Note. Unassigned TDEL may vary as a result of the surrender,
cancellation or non-renewal of an access licence’s IDELs, or the
operation of Part 8 of this Plan.
48 Daily extraction limits for individual access licence
holders
(1) Each access licence requiring an IDEL, as specified in Part 12 of
this Plan, is assigned the same proportion of the TDEL specified in clause 46
as its share component bears to all the share components of licences of that
category.
(2) Notwithstanding subclause (1), in relation to those access
licences that are currently excluded from a flow class or part of a flow class
by existing conditions on the access licence or the water supply work
nominated by the access licence, the IDEL resulting from subclause (1) will be
adjusted to reflect as far as possible such an
exclusion.
49 Granting of unassigned TDEL
(1) The unassigned TDEL in clause 47 may be assigned to access
licences in the following circumstances:(a) where they are applied for as part of a new access licence
application,
(b) to a local water utility access licence where the Minister varies
the access licence in accordance with sections 66 (3) or 66 (4) of the Act,
or
(c) to existing access licences for the purpose of pumping into farm
dams if:(i) the purpose of the additional IDEL sought is established by the
proponent,
(ii) the IDEL sought is the minimum required to satisfy that purpose,
and
(iii) the extraction is consistent with the objectives and principles of
this Plan.
(2) Where additional IDELs are assigned to an access licence in
accordance with this clause, the amount of IDEL so assigned shall be
determined by the Minister consistent with the ratios of share component to
IDEL for the specific category of access licence as initially assigned under
clause 48, as amended by clause 50.
50 Adjustment to TDELs and IDELs
(1) Where IDELs are assigned under clause 49 the unassigned TDEL is
reduced accordingly, and the TDEL assigned to the appropriate licence category
in clause 46 is increased accordingly.
(2) Pursuant to section 45 (1) (b) of the Act, if total extraction of
water under domestic and stock or native title rights exceeds the level
specified in Part 5 of this Plan:(a) first the unassigned TDEL specified in clause 47 then, if
necessary, the TDEL for unregulated river access licences in clause 46 (c)
shall be diminished to allow these additional basic landholder rights to be
met, and
(b) the IDELs of each unregulated river access licence will then be
reduced to comply with this diminished TDEL.
(3) Pursuant to section 45 (1) (b) of the Act, if any unassigned TDEL
cannot meet either:(a) the IDEL requirements of applicants for new domestic and stock
access licences, or
(b) a local water utility’s IDEL
requirements,
then the TDEL for unregulated river access licences in clause 46 (c) will
be diminished to such an extent as to allow those requirements to be
met.
(4) Following an adjustment to the TDEL for unregulated river access
licences in subclause (3) the IDELs of each unregulated river access licence
will then be reduced to comply with this diminished
TDEL.
(5) Any adjustment to unregulated river access licence IDELs arising
from this clause will be done at intervals of no greater than 5
years.
(6) If water that, pursuant to an access licence:(a) is committed to adaptive environmental water, then the TDEL for
classes specified on the committed access licence in the specified category
will be reduced by the IDEL on the access licence so committed and clauses 45
and 46 adjusted accordingly, or
(b) is uncommitted to adaptive environmental water, then the TDEL for
classes specified on the committed access licence in the specified category
will be increased by the IDEL on the access licence so uncommitted and clauses
45 and 46 adjusted accordingly.
51 Administrative arrangements for managing access to daily
flows
Notwithstanding the forgoing provisions of this Division, this
Plan provides that access licences may be managed as a group with respect to
the IDELs, subject to the following rules:(a) all access licences (excepting local water utility licences) with
IDELs shall be made part of a group established and maintained by the Minister
at the time when IDELs are first assigned under clause 48,
(b) access licence holders have the right to have their access licence
removed from the group, in which case they shall be permitted to extract under
that access licence a maximum of the licensed IDEL,
(c) where an access licence is removed or added to a group, the group
combined IDEL shall be adjusted by the amount of IDEL on the subject access
licence,
(d) access licence holders may make a request to form a group for
their access licences,
(e) daily extraction under all access licences within a group will be
assessed as a whole against the combined IDELs,
(f) daily extraction by a group cannot exceed the combined IDELs of
all access licences in the group,
(g) where it has been assessed that a holder of a licence within a
group is repeatedly causing the combined IDEL to be exceeded then the Minister
may remove that licence from the group,
(h) where daily extraction by a group exceeds the combined IDELs of
all access licences in the group, then the Minister may dissolve the group and
require each access licence holder to comply with the licensed
IDELs,
(i) should a holder of an access licence which is part of a group
commit the IDELs of that access licence to the environment consistent with
section 8 (1) (c) of the Act, then those IDELs shall be removed from the
group,
(j) an access licence may not be in more than one group,
and
(k) the Minister may refuse to allow an access licence to be included
in a group, and may refuse a request to form a
group.
52 Infrastructure failure
In the event of infrastructure failure, the Minister can elect
to:(a) continue to announce the current flow class,
(b) announce another flow class based on climatic conditions and any
other flow gauging information, or
(c) restrict access to water to the lowest flow
class.
Note. Infrastructure is defined in the dictionary.
Note. If satisfied that it is necessary to do so in the public interest,
the Minister may direct the holders of an access licence to cease using a
water supply work in accordance with section 323 of the
Act.
Part 11 Access licence dealing rules
53 Access licence dealing rules
(1) This Part is made in accordance with section 20 (1) (d) of the Act
and with the Minister’s access licence dealing principles gazetted on 27
December 2002 under section 71Z of the Act.
(2) Applications for access licence dealings may be granted subject to
the Minister’s access licence dealing principles gazetted from time to
time under section 71Z of the Act and the rules in this
Part.
Note. There are a number of mechanisms within the Act, called access
licence dealings, to change either the ownership of all or part of an access
licence, or the location within a water source at which all or part of the
share and extraction components of access licences can be exercised. These
dealings are governed by the principles in section 5 of the Act, the
Minister’s access licence dealing principles, and the rules in this
Part.
Note. Where there is an inconsistency between access licence dealing
rules established in this Plan and Minister’s access licence dealing
principles gazetted subsequent to the commencement of this Plan, section 71Z
of the Act provides for the access licence dealing rules in this Plan to
prevail.
54 Rules relating to constraints within this water
source
(1) This clause applies to any relevant dealings under sections 71Q,
71S and 71W of the Act, and with respect to water allocation assignments
within this water source under section 71T of the
Act.
(2) Dealings are prohibited under this clause if any of the access
licences or water allocations involved are not within this water source,
unless the dealing is permitted under clause 59.
Note. Clause 56 relates to any dealings that involve an access licence
moving from one water source to another.
55 Rules for access licence dealings which alter the times,
rates or circumstances specified in access licence extraction
components
Notwithstanding clause 54, applications under section 71S of the
Act to vary the times, rates or circumstances specified in an access licence
with respect to the taking of water under the licence are prohibited, unless
the dealing is in accordance with clause 49 (c).
56 Rules for change of water source
(1) This clause relates to dealings under section 71R of the
Act.Note. Section 71R dealings are the mechanism by which access licences
can move from one water source to another. Once the change in water source has
been affected, if permitted, the new licence will have to nominate specified
works (by a dealing under section 71W of the Act) in the receiving water
source before extraction can commence.
(2) Dealings under section 71R of the Act are prohibited in this water
source, unless provided for in this clause.
(3) An access licence with a share component specifying this water
source may be cancelled and a new licence issued in another water source only
if:(a) the new access licence issued is within this Unit,
and
(b) the access licence dealing rules in the other water source permit
such a dealing.
(4) An access licence with a share component specifying another water
source may be cancelled and a new licence issued in this water source under
this dealing only if:(a) the access licence cancelled is within this Unit,
and
(b) the access licence dealing rules in the other water source permit
such a dealing.
(5) The volume of the share component on an access licence issued
under a dealing provided for in this clause is to be the volume of the
cancelled access licence share component.
(6) The extraction component of the cancelled access licence is not to
be carried over to the new access licence.
57 Rules for conversion of access licence category
(1) This clause relates to dealings under section 71O of the
Act.
(2) Conversion of an access licence of one category to an access
licence of another category may be permitted only if:(a) the conversion is from an unregulated river access licence to a
runoff harvesting access licence,
(b) the conversion is from a runoff harvesting access licence to an
unregulated river access licence, or
(c) (Repealed)
Note. Any access to very low flows previously possible under the
domestic and stock access licence will not be carried over to the new
unregulated river access licence.
(3) The volume of share component on an access licence issued under
this clause is to be the volume of the cancelled share component multiplied by
a conversion factor established by the Minister, and published in an Order
made under section 71Z of the Act, that protects environmental water, basic
landholder rights, and the reliability of supply to all other access licences
subject to this Plan.
58 Rules for interstate access licence transfer
(1) This clause relates to dealings under section 71U of the
Act.
(2) Dealings that result in the interstate transfer of an access
licence into or out of this water source are
prohibited.
59 Rules for water allocation assignments between water
sources
(1) This clause relates to dealings under section 71T of the Act, in
relation to water allocation assignments between water
sources.
(2) Dealings under section 71T of the Act that result in water
allocation assignments to or from access licences in this water source are
prohibited unless provided for in this clause.
(3) Dealings that assign water allocations between access licences
inside this water source and access licences outside this water source, but
inside this Unit, are permitted only if the access licence dealing rules in
the other water source permit such a dealing.
(4) Dealings that assign water allocations between access licences
inside this water source, are permitted.
Note. Each water allocation assignment must be applied for. Licence
holders may enter into private contracts to assign water allocations for a
number of years. Such contracts are not guaranteed by the Government, and
approval must be sought annually. Approval will be subject to the rules in
this Plan, including local impact assessment.
60 Rules for interstate assignment of water
allocations
(1) This clause relates to dealings under section 71V of the
Act.
(2) Dealings that result in interstate assignment of water allocations
to or from this water source are prohibited.
Part 12 Mandatory conditions
61 Mandatory conditions on access licences
(1) This Part is made in accordance with sections 17 (c) and 20 (2)
(e) of the Act.
(2) All access licences shall have mandatory conditions to give effect
to the provisions of this Plan in relation to the following:(a) the specification of the share component of the access
licence,
(b) the specification of the extraction component of the access
licence, including IDELs arising from the operation of Part 10 Division 3 of
this Plan where applicable, and the variation thereof,
(c) the requirement that extraction under the access licence will be
subject to the available water determinations,
(d) the requirement that extraction under the access licence will be
subject to the water allocation account management rules established in Part
10 Division 2 of this Plan,
(e) the requirement that the taking of water in accordance with the
access licence will only be permitted if the resulting debit from the access
licence water allocation account will not exceed the volume of water
allocation remaining in the account,
(f) the requirement that water may only be taken under the access
licence by the water supply work nominated by the access licence,
and
(g) any other conditions required to implement the provisions of this
Plan.
(3) All local water utility access or any future major utility access
licences in this water source must have a mandatory condition specifying that
water must not be taken if it were to cause the respective local water utility
long term average annual extraction limit as specified in clause 35 to be
exceeded.
61A Very low flow access conditions
(1) Notwithstanding any cease to pump conditions established on the
licence, during periods of very low flows, holders of access licences listed
on Schedule 6 may continue to access water to comply with the requirements of
the Food Production (Safety) Act or the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act
for the following purposes:(a) fruit washing,
(b) cleaning of dairy plant and equipment for the purpose of
hygiene,
(c) poultry watering and misting, and
(d) cleaning of enclosures used for intensive animal production for
the purposes of hygiene.
(2) The maximum daily volume that can extracted under subclause (1)
will be the minimum required to satisfy the purposes in that subclause, will
be individually assessed and specified on each access licence within 12 months
of the commencement of this Plan, will not exceed 20 kilolitres per day, and
will not be increased.
(3) Upon written request by the holder of an access licence, the
Minister may add a licence to Schedule 6, but only if the licence meets the
purpose requirements established in subclause (1), and the purpose existed
prior to 1 July 2004.
(4) A licence will be removed from the Schedule if:(a) any access licence dealing results in the water being extracted
from a different location,
(b) an alternative water supply is obtained, that satisfies the
requirements of subclause (1), or
(c) the licence is surrendered, cancelled, or not
renewed.
(5) Notwithstanding subclauses (1) to (4), extraction of water by an
approved water supply work is only permitted if there is visible flow in the
river in the vicinity of the work.
(6) An assessment of the continuing requirements for access under this
clause will be undertaken before the end of the Plan, and the schedule amended
or deleted at the end of the Plan, if such a review determines that this
concessional access is no longer required.
(7) The assessment made under subclause (6) will be undertaken for the
Plan as a whole, and for each individual licence on the
Schedule.
62 Unregulated river access licences
All unregulated river access licences shall have mandatory
conditions to give effect to the following:(a) water may only be taken in accordance with a flow class determined
by the Minister, at a rate not exceeding that specified for the flow class on
the access licence extraction component, unless otherwise authorised by an
approved group, and
(b) notwithstanding subclause (a), water may be taken without any
restrictions in rate from an in-river dam while the dam is passing all
inflows.
62A Unregulated river (Aboriginal cultural) access
licences
All unregulated river (Aboriginal cultural) access licences shall
have mandatory conditions to give effect to the following:(a) water shall only be taken by Aboriginal persons or communities for
personal, domestic and communal purposes including the purposes of drinking,
food preparation, washing, manufacturing traditional artefacts, watering
domestic gardens, cultural teaching, hunting, fishing, and gathering, and for
recreational, cultural and ceremonial purposes,
(b) water may only be taken in accordance with a flow class determined
by the Minister, at a rate not exceeding that specified for the flow class on
the access licence extraction component, unless otherwise authorised by an
approved group,
(c) notwithstanding subclause (b), water may be taken without any
restrictions in rate from an in-river dam while the dam is passing all
inflows, and
(d) the conditions in subclauses (b) and (c) are not to be imposed if
the extraction component of the access licence specifies that water may only
be taken from a runoff harvesting dam.
63 Local water utility access licences
All local water utility access licences shall have mandatory
conditions to give effect to the following:(a) water may only be taken for the purposes of supplying water for
the exercise of a water supply function of the local water utility or for
other such purpose provided for under the Act,
(b) water may only be taken in accordance with a flow class determined
by the Minister, at a rate not exceeding that specified for the flow class on
the access licence extraction component,
(c) notwithstanding subclause (b), water may be taken without any
restrictions in rate from an in-river dam while the dam is passing all
inflows, and
(d) a local water utility must prepare a demand management strategy to
the specifications and satisfaction of the Minister before commencing to pump
under the local water utility access licence.
64 Domestic and stock access licences
All domestic and stock access licences shall have mandatory
conditions to give effect to the following:(a) water may only be taken for the purposes of domestic consumption
or stock watering as defined in section 52 of the Act,
(b) water may only be taken in accordance with a flow class determined
by the Minister, at a rate not exceeding that specified for the flow class on
the access licence extraction component, unless otherwise authorised by an
approved group,
(c) notwithstanding subclause (b), water may be taken without any
restrictions in rate from an in-river dam while the dam is passing all
inflows, and
(d) the conditions in subclauses (b) and (c) are not to be imposed if
the extraction component of the access licence specifies that water may only
be taken from a runoff harvesting dam.
65 Runoff harvesting access licences
All runoff harvesting access licences shall have a mandatory
condition imposed on them specifying that water may be taken without
restriction in rate, but only from the specified work.
66 Mandatory conditions on water supply works
approvals
All approvals for water supply works in this water source shall
have mandatory conditions to give effect to the provisions of this Plan in
relation to the following:(a) flow measurement devices:(i) shall be installed and maintained on all works used for extraction
of water under an access licence, and
(ii) shall be of a type and shall be maintained in a manner which is
acceptable to the Minister,
(b) water extraction and property water management infrastructure
details shall be provided to the Minister on request,
(c) it is the responsibility of the work approval holder to ascertain
from the Minister the flow class at any time before commencing to take water
under an access licence with an IDEL,
(d) notwithstanding all other rights and conditions, extraction of
water from a river by an approved water supply work is not permitted if there
is no visible flow in the river in the vicinity of the work,
and
(e) extraction under an access licence through an approved work is
only authorised with respect to the work nominated by the access
licence.
Part 13 Granting and amending water supply works
approvals
67 Granting and amending water supply works
approvals
This Part is made in accordance with section 21 (b) of the
Act.
68 Runoff harvesting dams
(1) New or expanded runoff harvesting dams shall, in addition to other
considerations, be subject to the dam capacity not exceeding that which is
consistent with the access licence share component specifying the runoff
harvesting dam as the nominated work.
(2) When the water allocations that may be taken from a runoff
harvesting dam are reduced either by the Minister, or on application of the
approval holder, or by an assignment in accordance with Part 11 of this Plan,
the Minister may impose an additional condition requiring the dam to be
modified so as to reduce its capacity, or requiring the water taken and
evaporated from the dam to be reduced, consistent with the reduction in water
allocations available.
Note. Extraction of water from a runoff harvesting dam requires a runoff
harvesting access licence, unless the runoff harvesting dam is within the
maximum harvestable right dam capacity for the property on which it is
located, in which case no licences or approvals are required. Runoff
harvesting is a category of access licence to be established by regulation
under section 57 (k) of the Act.
69 In-river dams
No new in-river dams shall be approved within this water
source.Note. Taking of water from an in-river dam requires an access licence
unless it is taken in accordance with section 52 of the Act (domestic and
stock rights). In either case, however, the dam requires a water management
works approval unless exempted by regulation under the
Act.
Part 14 Monitoring and reporting
70 Monitoring and reporting of performance
indicators
The monitoring and reporting of the performance indicators
specified in clause 13 shall be undertaken by the Minister.Note. Review and Audit of this PlanIn accordance with section 43A of the Act, the Natural Resources
Commission must undertake a review of this Plan prior to any decision to
extend its term or to make a new plan. The review must consider the extent to
which the Plan’s water sharing provisions have contributed to achieving
or not achieving the relevant natural resource management standards and
targets in the catchment management area (as referred to in section 5 of the
Catchment Management Authorities Act
2003).
When undertaking this review the Natural Resources Commission is
required to call for public submissions. The Commission will take into
consideration any submission received as well as any other relevant State-wide
or regional government policies or agreements that apply to the catchment
management area.
In accordance with section 44 of the Act, this Plan will be
audited at intervals of no more than five years, for the purpose of
ascertaining whether its provisions are being given effect to. This audit is
to be carried out by an audit panel appointed by the Minister in consultation
with the water management committee, where one exists.
Note. Implementation ProgramIn accordance with section 51 of the Act, the Minister may
establish an Implementation Program that sets out the means by which the
provisions of this Plan are to be achieved.
It is proposed that the Minister establish an Implementation
Program for this Plan. Pursuant to section 51 (5) of the Act, the
Implementation Program is to be reviewed annually by the Minister to determine
whether it is effective in implementing this Plan.
The results of the review of the Implementation Program are
included in the annual report for the Department.
Part 15 Amendment of this Plan
71 Amendment of this Plan
This part is made in accordance with section 45 (1) (b) of the
Act.
72 Amendment of very low flow provisions
(1) The Minister may, under section 45 (1) (b) of the Act and by
notice published in the NSW Government Gazette, vary the very low flow levels
established in clause 17 and consequently the bottom of B class established in
clause 17, following field verification.
(2) Any variation made under subclause (1) should result in the very
low flow level:(a) being not less than the level that protects the lowest 5% of days
with flow, or
(b) being a level that is lower than that at subclause (2) (a)
provided that, in the opinion of the Minister, there is sufficient
justification for adopting the lower level.
(3) The Minister should cause the field verification in subclause (1)
to be undertaken as soon as practical, but before the review of this Plan
under section 43 (2) of the Act.
(4) The field verification should assess the degree to which the
objectives in clause 11 (a) and (b) are met.
(5) In undertaking the field verification the Minister should:(a) consult with the NSW Environment Protection Authority, NSW
Fisheries, NSW Agriculture and the NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service,
and other interest groups determined by the Minister, and
(b) prepare a report documenting:(i) the methodology adopted,
(ii) the hypotheses tested,
(iii) the field results and conclusions in terms of the degree to which
the objectives in clause 11 (a) and (b) are met,
(iv) the flow level recommended to meet the objectives,
and
(v) the socio-economic impacts of recommended changes to the flow
level.
73 Review of field verification
(1) The Minister should seek advice from a review body on the field
verification report specified in clause 72 (5) (b) before varying this Plan in
accordance with clause 72 (1), if the field verification recommends a
variation in the very low flow levels established in clause
17.
(2) This review body may be:(a) a water management committee with water sharing responsibilities
for this water source,
(b) the relevant Catchment Management Authority,
or
(c) an expert advisory panel or advisory committee established for
this purpose by the Minister on the recommendation of a water management
committee or Catchment Management Authority referenced at subclause (2)
(a).
(3) The review body should provide advice to the Minister on the field
verification report, and advise on any changes to the recommendations
contained in the report in relation to any variation of the very low flow
levels.
(4) The review body should respond to the Minister as soon as
practical after receiving the report, or within 3 months of that date at the
latest.
74 Other amendment of this Plan
This Plan can be amended in accordance with:(a) clause 36 in respect to a variation in the long-term average
extraction limit, or
(b) clause 50 in respect to adjustments to TDELs and
IDELs.
75 Amendment relating to planned environmental
water
(1) The Minister may amend this Plan to provide for the recovery of
planned environmental water as follows:(a) the recovery is only to apply where the Minister has cancelled an
access licence held by the Minister in accordance with section 8A of the
Act,
(b) the amount of additional water to be provided as planned
environmental water is to be equivalent to the annual average extraction of
water under the cancelled licence over the long-term,
(c) the average annual long-term availability of water for the
remaining access licences that relate to the water source concerned is to be
reduced by the average annual long-term extraction of water under the
cancelled licence.
(2) The Minister may amend this Plan to specify the purposes for which
planned environmental water committed under section 8A of the Act is to be
used.
76 Amendment of Plan relating to floodplain
harvesting
The Minister may amend this Plan so as to provide for the
floodplain harvesting of water by amending the waters or water sources to
which this Plan applies and by consequential amendments so long as the
amendments:(a) if the Plan has already taken into consideration floodplain
harvesting extractions, do not affect the outcomes of the long-term extraction
limit specified in the Plan, or
(b) if the Plan has not already taken into consideration floodplain
harvesting extractions, do not allow more water being taken pursuant to access
licences for floodplain harvesting than permitted under Schedule F to the
Agreement within the meaning of the Murray–Darling Basin Act
1992.
Schedule 1 Dictionary
The following definitions apply to this Plan in addition to the
definitions set out in the Act:
account water is
the balance in an access licence water allocation account at a particular
time.
Note. An access licence water allocation account records water
allocations accrued under the licence as well as water allocations taken,
assigned or re-credited. The operation of the account is also governed by
rules for the carrying over of credits from one accounting period to the next
and rules for the maximum credit that may be allowed to accumulate in the
account as established in a water sharing plan. Water allocations are the
shares of available water accrued under an access licence from time to time as
a result of available water determinations.
conversion
factor refers to the adjustment factor that is to be applied to
share components when they are cancelled or reissued in a different water
source and visa versa, or when the licence category is changed. It is designed
to provide for the fact that the value of a unit of share component in terms
of the average water allocations that result from it may vary from one water
source to another, or from one category of licence to another.
endangered
ecological communities means ecological communities listed in
Schedule 1 of the Threatened Species
Conservation Act 1995 or Schedule 4 of the Fisheries Management Act
1994.
extraction
limit is a limit on the amount of water that may be extracted from
an extraction management unit.
extraction
management unit is a group of water sources for the purpose of
managing annual average extraction.
farm dam is a privately
owned dam typically of earthen construction designed to collect and/or store
water for use on one or a few properties. It does not include publicly owned
dams or weirs. See also in-river
dam and runoff
harvesting dam.
flow classes are
categorised by the size and duration of flow levels in unregulated rivers, for
example:
(a) very low flows may be a class on their own,
(b) low flows may be categorised as ‘A’
class,
(c) moderate flows may be categorised as ‘B’
class,
(d) high flows may be categorised as ‘C’
class,
(e) very high flows may be categorised as ‘D’ class,
and
(f) extremely high flows may be categorised as ‘E’
class.
flow gauging
station is a device that is used to measure the height of a river,
from which the flow in the river can be calculated.
individual daily extraction
limit (IDEL) is the volume of water that may be extracted by an
individual access licence from an unregulated river on a daily basis from a
particular flow class.
infrastructure
includes, but is not limited to, a:
(a) flow gauging device or any other appliance that is used to measure
the height of a river relative to a known datum point, from which the flow in
the river can be calculated, or
(b) flow announcement system which is the mechanism by which the
Minister communicates daily flow classes to the holders of an access licence
within this water source.
in-river dam is
a dam on a 3rd, 4th or higher order river. 3rd, 4th or higher order rivers are
as defined in the Order made under section 5 of the Water Act 1912 in relation to the
definition of a “river” gazetted 23 March 2001. See also farm dam and runoff harvesting
dam.
runoff
harvesting dam is a farm dam on a hillside or 1st or 2nd order
stream which collects and stores rainfall runoff. 1st and 2nd order streams
are as defined in the Order made under section 5 of the Water Act 1912 in relation to the
definition of a river gazetted 23 March 2001. See also farm dam and in-river dam.
Note. This Order refers to watercourses shown as blue lines on
topographic maps. The lines which are uppermost in a catchment are 1st order
streams, when two 1st order streams are joined they make a 2nd order stream,
etc. For more information see the Farm Dams Assessment Guide available from
the Department of Land and Water Conservation.
total daily
extraction limit (TDEL) is the volume of water that may be extracted
under access licences from an unregulated river on a daily basis from a
particular flow class.
Schedule 2 Jilliby Jilliby Creek Water Source

Schedule 3 Rivers in the Jilliby Jilliby Creek Water
Source
This water source includes, without limitation:
Armstrongs Creek
Calmans Gully
Edwards Gully
Jilliby Jilliby Creek
Little Jilliby Creek
Lowers Gully
Myrtle Creek
Schedule 4 Contribution to relevant targets in the December
2002 State Water Management Outcomes Plan
Levels of assessed contribution:FULL—contributes to target in full
HIGH—while not fully contributing to target, there is a good
level of contribution
PARTIAL—goes some way to contributing to the
target
LOW—only small degree of contribution to
target
Relevant Target | Level of contribution | Comments |
Target 1c Long term average annual
extraction limits which are ecologically sustainable, and which minimise
downstream impacts, established in all coastal water sources | HIGH | • Part 9 of this Plan clearly sets out the basis for the extraction
limit for the Tuggerah Lakes Extraction Management Unit.
• Until the cumulative impact of this limit can be assessed for all
of this Unit it is not possible to properly assess ecological sustainability
and downstream impacts.
• Application of daily extraction limits should ensure adequate
downstream flows.
|
Target 1f Rules for adjustments to future
available water determinations in the event that the extraction limits are
exceeded, clearly prescribed in consultation with the relevant management
committee, and acted upon | FULL | • Rules set out in Part 9 of this Plan.
|
Target 2 All management plans incorporating
mechanisms to protect and restore aquatic habitats, and the diversity and
abundance of native animals and plants, with particular reference to
threatened species, populations and communities and key threatening
processes | HIGH | • Part 10 of this Plan puts in place comprehensive TDELs to
protect/restore environmental flows.
• This Plan has improved low to very low flow
protection.
• This Plan is consistent with relevant Threatened Species Recovery
Plans.
|
Target 4a Wherever the frequency of
“end of system” daily flows would be less than 60 percent of the
predevelopment level without environmental water rules or extraction limits,
the flows increased to 60 percent of predevelopment levels or increased by at
least 10 percent of the predevelopment frequency | FULL | • Total daily extraction limits protect 69–75% of
flows.
|
Target 4b Frequency of “end of
system” daily very low flows (as defined by local field investigation)
protected or restored to predevelopment levels to maintain or restore their
critical ecological functions, drought refuges and habitat connectivity. In
the absence of such local assessments, protection extended up to at least the
predevelopment 95th percentile | FULL | • Cease to pump (CTP) levels from 0.5 ML/day in year 1, protect
flows below 95th percentile of all days, 0.75 ML/day in year 2
protect flows below 95th percentile of all days, 1.0 ML/day in year
3 onwards protects below 90th percentile of all days with
flow.
• Field verification of CTPs is provided
for.
|
Target 5 Access rights for water access
licensees clearly and legally specified in terms of share and extraction
components | FULL | • This Plan establishes total daily extraction limits for
distribution to individual licence.
• This Plan provides dealing principles for share components and
IDELs.
|
Target 6b For surface water sources, a
pathway for reducing the share components to 200 percent of the long term
average annual extraction limit to be established not later than the end of
the term of the SWMOP | FULL | • Total licensed share components for the Tuggerah Lakes Extraction
Management Unit should not exceed 200% of the extraction limit for this
Unit.
|
Target 7 Mechanisms in place to enable
Aboriginal communities to gain an increased share of the benefits of the water
economy | HIGH | • The Government has established alternative mechanisms to address
this target.
• This Plan provides market
opportunities.
|
Target 8 Daily extraction components
specified and tradeable, subject to metering, reporting and compliance, for at
least 50 percent of unregulated river access licences and for 80 percent of
stressed unregulated rivers | FULL | • To meet this target Statewide, the individual plans should as far
as practicable, establish TDELs across the whole water source, and this Plan
does this.
|
Target 12 Measures in place in all water
sources subject to a gazetted water sharing plan to protect domestic and stock
rights from the impact of other water access and use | FULL | • Cease to pump level will protect flows for domestic and stock, and
TDELs also explicitly provide for domestic and stock
requirements.
|
Target 13 The knowledge sharing, training
and resources necessary to ensure that Aboriginal people have the capacity to
be effectively involved in water management identified and
addressed | PARTIAL | • A workshop was held with members of the Local Aboriginal Land
Council to input ideas into the development of this Plan.
• 2 representatives of the Aboriginal community were on the
committee that prepared this Plan.
|
Target 14 Water sources, ecosystems and
sites of cultural or traditional importance to Aboriginal people identified,
plans of management prepared, and measures put in place to protect and improve
them | HIGH | • This Plan does not address specific Aboriginal cultural or
traditional requirements and has not identified any sites of particular
importance.
• This Plan does provide high level of environmental protection
which should assist in protecting Aboriginal
values.
|
Target 16a All share components of access
licences tradeable | FULL | • This Plan clarifies access licence share components and
establishes daily extraction limits.
• Part 11 of this Plan provides for trading of share components and
IDELs.
|
Target 16c Conversion factors and protocols
established to facilitate trading and dealings between water sources, whilst
also protecting existing access and environmental water | FULL | • Part 11 of this Plan establishes an exchange rate of 1:1 for
trading between water sources in the Tuggerah Lakes Extraction Management
Unit.
|
Target 16d Reduced conversion factors only
applied when necessary to offset increased losses associated with water supply
delivery | FULL | • This Plan does not impose reduction
factors.
|
Target 16e Any unassigned access rights
identified and clear mechanisms established for their future
assignment | FULL | • This Plan has no unassigned TDEL.
• This Plan establishes management rules for future
allocation.
|
Target 35 All management plans incorporating
water quality objectives that have considered Government approved Interim
Environmental Objectives, the current Australian and New Zealand Environment
and Conservation Council Guidelines and the recommendations of relevant
Healthy Rivers Commission Inquiries | HIGH | • This Plan includes a generalised water quality
objective.
• This Plan does provide reasonably high level of environmental
protection which should assist in protecting water
quality.
|
Schedule 5 Tuggerah Lakes Extraction Management
Unit

Schedule 6 Access licences with very low flow
access
(no licences identified at the time of making of this amending
order)
Appendix 1 Central Coast Water Management Area

Appendix 2 Location of maps for public inspection
The maps in relation to this Plan may be inspected at:
Regional Office
Department of Land and Water Conservation
Newcastle Office
464 King Street
NEWCASTLE NSW 2302
District Office
Department of Land & Water Conservation
40 Mann Street
GOSFORD NSW 2205
Appendix 3 Performance indicators
Performance indicators for the Jilliby Jilliby Creek Water
Sharing Plan |
Performance indicator | Related objective | As measured by | Commentary |
(a) Change in low flows.
| 11 (a) 11 (b) 11 (e) | • Assessment of change in flow duration characteristics, from time
of Plan commencement, at identified reference
points.
| • River Flow Objectives (RFOs) 1, 2 and 6. RFOs are the objectives agreed to by the NSW Government aimed at
safeguarding river flows for environmental health.Note. Not every objective is relevant to every river in
NSW.
• Plan will contribute to a decrease in the frequency and duration
of low flows.
• This assessment will focus on the plan’s flow reference
point(s), and will be based on a qualitative assessment of compliance with the
water sharing rules, due to the current modelling limitations in most
unregulated rivers.
• Where data is limited, it is only possible to assess change from
the period of plan commencement to the time the indicator is
assessed.
• There will be a high climatic influence on changes to the flow
characteristics, depending on if the time period of assessment has been wet or
dry.
|
(b) Change in moderate to high flows.
| 11 (c) 11 (d) | • Assessment of change in flow duration characteristics, from time
of Plan commencement, at identified reference
points.
| • RFO 3.
• Plan will maintain or increase the frequency and duration of
moderate to high flows.
• This assessment will focus on the plan’s flow reference
point(s), and will be based on a qualitative assessment of compliance with the
water sharing rules, due to the current modelling limitations in most
unregulated rivers.
• Where data is limited, it is only possible to assess change from
the period of plan commencement to the time the indicator is
assessed.
• There will be a high climatic influence on changes to the flow
characteristics, depending on if the time period of assessment has been wet or
dry.
|
(c) Change in local water utilities and major water utilities access
(where those utilities are involved in urban water
provision).
| 11 (j) 11 (k) | • Change in safe yield (safe yield is the annual
demand that can be supplied from the water supply headworks and is based on
the period of records used and an acceptable level of
restriction).
| • Water sharing plans for unregulated water sources have the
potential to impact on urban water supplies.
• Where safe yield has been determined, or where a hydrologic model
can be developed, compare safe yield under the water sharing rules of this
plan, and the rules that existed prior to its
implementation.
• Where there is no known safe yield, but the flow regime at the
pump site is known, assessment will be limited to change in the number of days
of access. Reporting will focus on an assessment of whether this change in
access has led to increased levels of town water supply restrictions during
the period of the plan.
|
(d) Change in ecological condition of this water source and dependent
ecosystems.
| 11 (d) 11 (g) 11 (l) | • Periodic assessment of identified attributes of this water source
and dependent ecosystems.
| • The ecological influence of the Plan is limited to providing for
changes in flow regime aimed at improving the ecological condition of the
water source and dependent ecosystems.
• The focus of this performance indicator will be the effect of flow
strategies.
• Information on flow requirements of ecological systems is limited
so physical or hydraulic surrogates will be used to assess the influence of
the Plan. For example, the status of wetted area, depth in pools and flow
velocity over riffles.
• In addition to the environmental water provisions defined in this
Plan, there are many other factors that contribute to achievement of
ecological objectives. Riparian vegetation, water quality, farming techniques,
soil erosion, water flow patterns and other catchment characteristics all
significantly influence ecological condition. It is difficult to assess which
factor is the most influential at a particular time and
place.
• Research and development into the impacts of flow on ecological
condition will be incorporated into assessment of the plan where the
information is available and relevant.
|
(e) Extent to which basic landholder rights requirements have been
met.
| 11 (k) | • Assessment of cease to pump levels in relation to basic rights
requirements.
| • Basic landholder rights usage figures in water sharing plans are
estimated (not actual use).
|
(f) Change in economic benefits derived from water extraction and
use.
| 11 (i) | • Number of days access provided over the time of the
plan.
• Number of new off stream storages.
• Change in unit price of water transferred.
• Change in gross margins.
| • There are many factors affecting economic status of a region, for
example commodity prices.
• Measurement of the number of new off stream storages will indicate
the adjustment to the rules and the ongoing access to
water.
• Assessment undertaken as part of plan performance monitoring will
make assumptions to attempt to identify the impact of the plan
provisions.
• The data can reflect changes in crops, commodity prices, climate,
water availability, economic climate and input
costs.
|
(g) Extent to which native title rights requirements have been
met.
| 11 (h) 11 (l) | • Assessment of amount and type of information collected to identify
the range of values of water to Aboriginal people.
| • The collection of information on the values associated with water
is considered the first step in addressing the objects of the Act. It would be
expected that at the end of five years there should be relevant information
collected for each water source, as a minimum
requirement.
|
(h) Extent of recognition of spiritual, social and customary values of
water to Aboriginal people.
| 11 (h) 11 (l) | • Assessment of amount and type of information collected to identify
the range of values of water to Aboriginal people.
| • The collection of information on the values associated with water
is considered the first step in addressing the objects of the Act. It would be
expected that at the end of 5 years there should be relevant information
collected for each water source, as a minimum
requirement.
|
Appendix 4 (Repealed)
Historical notes
The following abbreviations are used in the Historical notes:
Am |
amended |
LW |
legislation website |
Sch |
Schedule |
Cl |
clause |
No |
number |
Schs |
Schedules |
Cll |
clauses |
p |
page |
Sec |
section |
Div |
Division |
pp |
pages |
Secs |
sections |
Divs |
Divisions |
Reg |
Regulation |
Subdiv |
Subdivision |
GG |
Government Gazette |
Regs |
Regulations |
Subdivs |
Subdivisions |
Ins |
inserted |
Rep |
repealed |
Subst |
substituted |
Table of amending instruments
Water Sharing
Plan for the Jilliby Jilliby Creek Water Source 2003 published
in Gazette No 39 of 7.2.2003, p 1151 and amended as follows:
Water Management Act 2000 No
92. Assented to 8.12.2000. Date of commencement of Sch 12, 1.1.2006,
sec 2 (1) of the Water Management Amendment
Act 2005 and GG No 157 of 16.12.2005, p 10884. Amended by
Water Management Amendment Act 2005
No 118. Assented to 7.12.2005. Date of commencement of Sch 1 [58],
1.1.2006, sec 2 (1) and GG No 157 of 16.12.2005, p 10884.
Water Management (Ministers’ Plans)
Amendment Order 2003 (GG No 101 of 20.6.2003, p 5804 (see also
GG No 104 of 27.6.2003, p 6352))
Water Management (Ministers’ Plans)
Further Amendment Order 2003 (GG No 197 of 19.12.2003, p
11451)
Water Management
(General) Regulation 2004 (GG No 110 of 1.7.2004, p
5008)
Water Management (Minister’s Plans)
Order No 2 of 2004 (GG No 110 of 1.7.2004, p 5072)
Statute Law (Miscellaneous Provisions)
Act (No 2) 2004 No 91. Assented to 10.12.2004. Date of
commencement of Sch 2.98, assent, sec 2 (2).
Table of amendments
Cl 3 | Am 20.6.2003; 19.12.2003. |
Cl 13 | Am 1.7.2004. |
Cl 21 | Am 1.7.2004; 2012 No 42, Sch
2.48. |
Cl 24 | Am 2000 No 92, Sch 12, Part 1 (ins 2005 No 118, Sch
1 [58]). |
Cl 32 | Am 1.7.2004. |
Cl 35 | Subst 2009 (349), Sch 1 [1]. |
Cl 36 | Subst 2009 (349), Sch 1 [2]. |
Cl 36A | Ins 2009 (349), Sch 1 [3]. |
Cl 37 | Am 1.7.2004. Subst 2009 (349), Sch 1
[4]. |
Cl 39 | Subst 2009 (349), Sch 1 [5]. |
Cl 40 | Rep 2009 (349), Sch 1 [6]. |
Cl 41 | Rep 2009 (349), Sch 1 [7]. |
Cl 42 | Subst 1.7.2004. Rep 2009 (349), Sch 1
[8]. |
Cl 43 | Rep 2009 (349), Sch 1 [9]. |
Cll 50, 53 | Am 1.7.2004. |
Cl 54 | Am 2004 No 91, Sch 2.98. |
Cl 57 | Am 1.7.2004. |
Cl 61 | Am 2009 (349), Sch 1 [10]. |
Cll 61A, 62A | Ins 1.7.2004. |
Cl 70 | Am 1.7.2004. |
Cl 71 | Subst 1.7.2004. |
Cll 72, 73 | Am 1.7.2004. |
Cl 75 | Ins 2000 No 92, Sch 12, Part 2 (ins 2005 No 118,
Sch 1 [58]). |
Cl 76 | Ins 2000 No 92, Sch 12, Part 3 (ins 2005 No 118,
Sch 1 [58]). |
Sch 6 | Ins 1.7.2004. |
Appendix 3 | Subst 1.7.2004. |
Appendix 4 | Rep 1.7.2004. |
The whole plan | Am 1.7.2004 (“section 42 (2)” omitted
wherever occurring in relation to references to the Water Management Act 2000,
“section 45 (1) (b)” inserted instead; “section 71A”
omitted wherever occurring in relation to references to the Water Management Act 2000,
“section 71M” inserted instead; “section 71B”,
“section 71C”, “section 71D”, “section
71E”, “section 71F”, “section 71G”,
“section 71H”, “section 71I”, “section
71J”, “section 71K” and “section 71L” omitted
wherever occurring in relation to references to the Water Management Act 2000,
“section 71O”, “section 71P”, “section
71Q”, “section 71R”, “section 71S”,
“section 71T”, “section 71U”, “section
71V”, “section 71W”, “section 71Y” and
“section 71Z” inserted instead, respectively; “environmental
health water” and “supplementary environmental water”
omitted wherever occurring, “planned environmental water” inserted
instead). |