COM: Port Stanvac Desalination Plant | 100gL | $1.8b
COM: Port Stanvac Desalination Plant | 100gL | $1.8b
Marty has just been over to Perth and checked out their De-Sal plant. Without too much background research (obviously) he states "...Because the Premier and his ministers failed to move on desalination when they should have, costs have almost certainly risen and a desalination plant for Adelaide will now be more expensive."
Here's a clipping from today's 'Tiser:
Desal plant delay 'will cost millions"
MICHAEL OWEN, POLITICAL REPORTER
May 09, 2007 01:20pm
OPPOSITION Leader Martin Hamilton-Smith is convinced desalination is the "water technology of the future" after returning from a tour of Perth's new desalination plant.
Mr Hamilton-Smith flew back to Adelaide last night after spending most of yesterday inspecting the plant at Kwinana in WA, which produces 17 per cent of Perth's water supply.
He said further delays in building a desalination plant in South Australian would cost taxpayers millions of dollars.
"To its credit the Western Australian Government bit the bullet, moved early and accepted that it needed additional water and just got on with a major desalination project,' Mr Hamilton-Smith said.
"We now need a commitment from Premier Mike Rann and Water Security Minister Karlene Maywald that after five years in office they will acknowledge that Adelaide also needs more water and a modern desalination plant.
"Because the Premier and his ministers failed to move on desalination when they should have, costs have almost certainly risen and a desalination plant for Adelaide will now be more expensive."
In March, Ms Maywald revealed a desalination working group had been formed by the Government to build on work SA Water had started in late 2005.
Earlier this year, then Liberal Party leader Iain Evans proposed a $400 million desalination plant for Adelaide to provide more than 20 per cent of the city's water supply.
Last week, an Advertiser poll found 69 per cent – including 73 per cent of Labor voters – supported SA spending at least $400 million to build a desalination plant in the metropolitan area to help provide more fresh water for the city.
What effect will a De-Sal plant in our gulfs have to the quality (saltiness) of the gulf's water, and the flow-on effect on the fishery, considering that these 2 gulfs do not flush themselves out as regularly as the Indian Ocean (where Kwinana is) does? Our gulfs and The Solent in England are the only places in the world that experience dodge tides - ie no tidal movement. Of course, dodge tides are not happening every day, but there is no doubt that tidal movement does not flush clean water through these gulfs on a regular basis.
Comments?
Here's a clipping from today's 'Tiser:
Desal plant delay 'will cost millions"
MICHAEL OWEN, POLITICAL REPORTER
May 09, 2007 01:20pm
OPPOSITION Leader Martin Hamilton-Smith is convinced desalination is the "water technology of the future" after returning from a tour of Perth's new desalination plant.
Mr Hamilton-Smith flew back to Adelaide last night after spending most of yesterday inspecting the plant at Kwinana in WA, which produces 17 per cent of Perth's water supply.
He said further delays in building a desalination plant in South Australian would cost taxpayers millions of dollars.
"To its credit the Western Australian Government bit the bullet, moved early and accepted that it needed additional water and just got on with a major desalination project,' Mr Hamilton-Smith said.
"We now need a commitment from Premier Mike Rann and Water Security Minister Karlene Maywald that after five years in office they will acknowledge that Adelaide also needs more water and a modern desalination plant.
"Because the Premier and his ministers failed to move on desalination when they should have, costs have almost certainly risen and a desalination plant for Adelaide will now be more expensive."
In March, Ms Maywald revealed a desalination working group had been formed by the Government to build on work SA Water had started in late 2005.
Earlier this year, then Liberal Party leader Iain Evans proposed a $400 million desalination plant for Adelaide to provide more than 20 per cent of the city's water supply.
Last week, an Advertiser poll found 69 per cent – including 73 per cent of Labor voters – supported SA spending at least $400 million to build a desalination plant in the metropolitan area to help provide more fresh water for the city.
What effect will a De-Sal plant in our gulfs have to the quality (saltiness) of the gulf's water, and the flow-on effect on the fishery, considering that these 2 gulfs do not flush themselves out as regularly as the Indian Ocean (where Kwinana is) does? Our gulfs and The Solent in England are the only places in the world that experience dodge tides - ie no tidal movement. Of course, dodge tides are not happening every day, but there is no doubt that tidal movement does not flush clean water through these gulfs on a regular basis.
Comments?
cheers,
Rhino
Rhino
Adelaide does not need a de-sal plant,
Martin Hamilton Smith's comment that Perth acted quickly is false as Perth's rainfall has been reducing for the past 30 years which has had a huge impact on water supply for the last 30 years. De-sal plant has only been recent addition to boost their water supply. It is not needed in Adelaide we can have other water supply alternatives like water recycling and aquifers. De sal plants will also have a massive environmental impact from the CO2 emissions and from the salt returning into the gulf. Definately not the solution for Adelaide
Martin Hamilton Smith's comment that Perth acted quickly is false as Perth's rainfall has been reducing for the past 30 years which has had a huge impact on water supply for the last 30 years. De-sal plant has only been recent addition to boost their water supply. It is not needed in Adelaide we can have other water supply alternatives like water recycling and aquifers. De sal plants will also have a massive environmental impact from the CO2 emissions and from the salt returning into the gulf. Definately not the solution for Adelaide
that's just a myth.alfer7_3 wrote:De sal plants will also have a massive environmental impact from ... the salt returning into the gulf. Definately not the solution for Adelaide
most new desal plants ensure that salinity levels in surrounding waters are not dramatically affected .
the perth desal plant itself ensures that the salinity levels in the area rise by less that 1%
- Ho Really
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Correct. If a desalination plant is needed, build it where there will be less environmental impact on the ocean and where it can serve growth areas (Victor Harbor, Goolwa and Murray Bridge). Then pipe it to existing reservoirs: Myponga, Mount Bold, Happy Valley, etc.shuza wrote:Well, seems everyone has forgotten that Victor Harbor/Goolwa faces the southern ocean. Build a desalation plant therewhere the dodge currents flush regulary or whatever terminology was used in that context. The pipings close enough to Adelaide, so shouldnt be too much trouble.
Cheers
- jimmy_2486
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It wouldn't affect the landscape, but it would still affect the gulf, and, in turn, the fishery. The problem doesn't go away because you can't see it.Mants wrote:i would rather see it built at pt stanvac, which wouldnt affect the landscape so much because the old refinery is still there.
My recommendation (and I'm not really qualified to make one, this just comes from reading and observation) would be somewhere near Backstairs Passage where the current is huge, and an under-sea pipeline to Adelaide, maybe coming ashore at Port Stanvac where it might be able to utilize existing infrastructure, and then heading toward Happy Valley Reservoir where the filtration plant is located.
cheers,
Rhino
Rhino
I dont know who to believe but at uni our lecturer said that the salinity issue from a desal plant is a myth. Apparently the reason fishstocks have fallen (among other things) is actually due to salinity levels in the gulf being too low.
He was telling us how before european settlement hardly any of Adelaides water runoff reached the gulf and was trapped in massive wetlands on the plains and since we have started pumping fresh stormwater into the gulf he reckons salinty levels have dropped significantly so maybe a bit of extra salinty might be a good thing.
He was telling us how before european settlement hardly any of Adelaides water runoff reached the gulf and was trapped in massive wetlands on the plains and since we have started pumping fresh stormwater into the gulf he reckons salinty levels have dropped significantly so maybe a bit of extra salinty might be a good thing.
but as i said, the perth plant ensures there is a less than 1% salinity rise in the seawater.rhino wrote:It wouldn't affect the landscape, but it would still affect the gulf, and, in turn, the fishery. The problem doesn't go away because you can't see it.Mants wrote:i would rather see it built at pt stanvac, which wouldnt affect the landscape so much because the old refinery is still there.
My recommendation (and I'm not really qualified to make one, this just comes from reading and observation) would be somewhere near Backstairs Passage where the current is huge, and an under-sea pipeline to Adelaide, maybe coming ashore at Port Stanvac where it might be able to utilize existing infrastructure, and then heading toward Happy Valley Reservoir where the filtration plant is located.
in adelaide's case, would a less than 1% salinity rise affect the fisheries etc? assuming that they build the plant with state of the art technology as perth has
- Ho Really
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Mants, I said to serve the region between Victor Harbor and Murray Bridge, I didn't say to build it on the beaches. rhino gave us a clue. Maybe Cape Jervis is a good spot.Mants wrote:i disagree...the strip from Victor to Goolwa is a beautiful untouched landscape mostly made up of tourist beaches and surf beaches. personally, i wouldnt wanna be swimming right next to a huge water plant.
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- jimmy_2486
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