The $37.9 million Sunraysia Water Efficiency Project (SWEP) has been completed, upgrading outdated infrastructure to deliver long-term water security for the agricultural sector and growing communities in the region.
Communities across Mildura, Red Cliffs and Merbein will benefit from the project, which is set to deliver safe and reliable access to a secure water supply in the Sunraysia region.
Minister for Water Harriet Shing visited Nichols Point Primary School in Mildura recently to announce the completion of the SWEP.
“Victoria has led the way in delivering our commitments under the Basin Plan, and in delivering reliable water and reducing wastage, the SWEP is another big achievement for our communities, environments, and food producers,” she said.
“We know that it’s projects just like this that will have a lasting and positive impact on our communities, industries, and environments.”
Over the past two years, the SWEP team worked more than 125,000 hours and carried out over 800 site inspections to replace an unsafe open channel with a 25km underground concrete-lined pipeline, along with 30km of fencing and 700 escape ladders to improve community safety around water.
The project also delivered a 2.5km buried pipeline across the Mildura, Red Cliffs and Merbein irrigation districts, building on upgrades to more than 450m and the installation of 100 modern flow meters – reducing wastage and promoting sustainable water management.
Lower Murray Water worked with the community to repurpose 350 historic Dethridge wheels previously used to measure water flow in open channels, a function now retired with the underground pipeline complete.
To preserve the region’s rich irrigation history, 30 wheels are being donated to a local artist for a display at Nichols Point Primary School.
This milestone marks a major step forward for the Lower Murray region, with SWEP set to recover at least 1.8GL of water across the Murray-Darling Basin – equal to 700 Olympic-sized swimming pools.
Supported by the Australian Government’s Off-Farm Efficiency Program, SWEP has upgraded around 27 kilometres of irrigation channel in total, creating over 100 full time jobs in the process.
SWEP is expected to generate a $20 million boost to regional Victoria’s economy, ensuring the Sunraysia district maintains its competitive edge in the food and agriculture sector through more efficient water delivery.
“Projects like this one in Sunraysia are a win-win,” Australia’s Minister for the Environment and Water Tanya Plibersek said.
“They make irrigation more efficient for farmers, improve amenity for communities and deliver much needed water back to the environment.
“Recovering the 450 gigalitre target is critical to full implementation of the Basin Plan so we can return the rivers to health in the face of a drying climate.”
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