First Allocation in Loddon, and Increases in Murray, Goulburn, Broken and Bullarook Systems
| Announcement Date: |
15 Mar 2010 |
| Next Announcement Due: |
1 Apr 2010 |
Allocation Data
Seasonal allocations for Goulburn-Murray Water customers on 15 Mar 2010:
| Murray |
78% |
+12% |
- |
| Broken |
13% |
+7% |
- |
| Goulburn |
69% |
+9% |
- |
| Campaspe |
% |
% |
- |
| Loddon |
3% |
+3% |
- |
| Bullarook Creek |
19% |
+4% |
- |
Further Information
Goulburn-Murray
Water (G‑MW), the resource manager for northern Victorian water systems, today announced
increased allocations in the Murray, Goulburn, Broken and Bullarook systems and
the first allocation in the Loddon system for the 2009/10 season. The Campaspe system
seasonal allocation remained at zero.
The season allocation in the Murray system
is 78% of high-reliability water shares (HRWS), which is an increase of 12%
HRWS. The Goulburn system allocation is 69% HRWS, which is an increase of
9% HRWS. The Broken system received an increase of 7% HRWS to be 13% HRWS,
and the Bullarook system allocation is up 4% HRWS to be 19% HRWS. The Loddon
system seasonal allocation is now 3% HRWS.
"The storms and associated rainfall across central Victoria between
5 March and 8 March have influenced the allocations announced today," said
Graeme Hannan, G-MW's Resource Manager. "The rain suppressed irrigation demand across
much of the G-MW area, and together with relatively small improvements in
storage volume provided very useful resource improvements. Almost all of the
northern Victorian systems received some benefit, and the Loddon was able to
receive an allocation for the first time since the 2007/08 season."
"The increase in the Murray
seasonal allocation has come partially from higher flows in the Ovens and
Goulburn rivers after the recent storms, and also from an improvement in Victoria's
water availability in Lake Victoria
arising from flows from the Darling River caused
by the heavy rains in the northern Murray-Darling Basin early
in the New Year," said Mr Hannan. "The current flooding in southern Queensland is
likely to significantly increase the volume of water stored in the Menindee Lakes and
hence further benefit Victorian Murray resources at the next allocation assessment."
"The Campaspe was the only system to receive very
little benefit from the Labour Day weekend rainfall," said Mr Hannan. "The
totals certainly looked promising, but there was very little reaction in the
catchment. Unfortunately, this means the Campaspe system remains at zero
allocation."
The final
allocation announcement for the 2009/10 season will be issued on Thursday 1 April 2010.