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Old 28-07-2017, 08:07 AM
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Sydney's water desalination plant.

At the time I said it was a con job so years on what has it delivered.
Has it ever supplied water or did Sydney just fall victim to the sky is falling corporation.
Was the capital investment worth it...how do we feel about the cost to have it turned off.
Who other than the recipients of the mony spent received benefit.
Alex
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Old 28-07-2017, 08:52 AM
cruxo (Craig)
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Hi Alex, I think the plant on the Gold Coast is only ever used during floods and when treatment plants are undergoing maintenance. All the major dams up here filled naturally, and have stayed around 80% capacity(or more) since before the desalination plant construction was completed.
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Old 28-07-2017, 09:17 AM
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Hi Craig
I recall years ago the retiring premier in a burst of activity went out , not to inspect hospitals or new road building stuff or any of those things one would consider very important, to inspect water desalination stuff in Dubai... Being a suspicious person I draw many unsupportable conclusions about that "research".

Now all this spending would not upset me other than I think a reasonable analysis of our wants and needs would probably see the money go elsewhere.
I can't think of anything at the moment but its seems so much money for such little benefit.

Alex
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Old 28-07-2017, 11:09 AM
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Well, the rampant salt shortages is Sydney supermarkets have subsided.
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Old 28-07-2017, 11:31 AM
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Australia is a land known for its droughts. So do you plan vital supplies based on normal rainfall or do make plans for contingencies and the worst scenario?

Not every project is about Govt corruption or stupidity. I for one think its a good thing to have a backup reserve. Water is not something you take for granted in basically a desert continent.

I worked in Goulburn for about a year when they had really high level water restrictions and what water they did have tasted foul. Not a good thing in a first world country.

If there were a drought and Sydney was faced again with running out of water the Govt would be labelled as stupid and not preparing for the future. If they build one and then we get normal or better rainfall for several years they get accused of waste and corruption.

Would you live in a house that had a limited water supply from rainfall only that would run out with no way of replenishing it if there were a 4 year drought (extremely common in Australia). I wouldn't.

Greg.
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Old 28-07-2017, 11:49 AM
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Hi Greg
Thanks for your input.
I can recall as a kid having to take boiled water to school during drought.
I think the approach Hong Kong took with the plover Dam project would be the way to go but I doubt many would agree.

I hope the Sydney Desalination Plant is used one day to save the city but I bet if you analysed the cost over time we could buy bottled spring water...

Thanks for presenting a counter view.

Alex
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Old 28-07-2017, 11:51 AM
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I imagine it would be much cheaper to recycle sewage water than to build desal plants.
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Old 28-07-2017, 11:52 AM
el_draco (Rom)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by gregbradley View Post
Not every project is about Govt corruption or stupidity.
Wahahahaha haaaaa..

... but in all seriousness, Melbourne has just been told the'll be out of water by 2060.... discounting climate change of course, which all good conservatives know... is a Chinese/Labour/Green/Scientific conspiracy
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Old 28-07-2017, 11:54 AM
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Here is a link to wiki re the plover dam.

The basic idea is you dam a cove off from the sea and let it fill with fresh water.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plover_Cove_Reservoir

Alex
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Old 28-07-2017, 11:58 AM
gary
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Hi Alex,

Today Warragamba Dam's level is at 91.9%. But consider that
only ten years ago, in 2007, it reached a record low of 32.5%.

Through the early and mid 2000's it remained low and water restrictions
were in place. Fast forward to more recent times and levels have
managed be high enough to go over the spillway.

So statistically that is a very large variability in levels in an historically very
short period of time.

The question perhaps is not whether it will ever run low again - it will -
but what price one is prepared to pay for ensuring that a city of 5+ million
people never runs out of water.

In cities where there is pandemonium if the electricity goes off for 30
minutes, imagine a scenario where a city the size of Sydney were without
sufficient water for days, weeks or months?

And Sydney keeps growing at an alarming rate.

In 2001 the population of Sydney was around 4.1 million and today it is
well over 5 million.

Insurance is always a double-edged sword. If we get lucky and
we look backwards and decided we didn't need it, we see it as
an opportunity cost.

But just like how we pay firemen to be on standby 24/7 in fire
stations around the country, we are grateful for the day they come
when it is our house which is the one on fire.

In an ideal world, you would be able to predict the future and only
build a new firestation or water supply the day before you needed it.

Alas our crystal ball is not that accurate.

An alternative emergency standby water supply for Sydney also
makes a lot of sense in the current security environment. Something
I would prefer not to discuss here but you know what I mean.
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Old 28-07-2017, 12:01 PM
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“Recycled water produces far more water [than desalination], it’s far more reliable in terms of actual operations, it uses less power, it provides a beneficial use for ground water, it offsets surface water supplies, and it actually prevents discharges into the ocean, as opposed to creating them,” Conner says.

https://psmag.com/environment/rundow...led-wastewater
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Old 28-07-2017, 12:08 PM
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I found this...

http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/535m-paid-...10-1miuw6.html

That's half a billion since 2012 isn't it?

So add the capital cost and the maintenance cost that must make the water we can eventually expect rather expensive per litr.

One wonders why we don't use sea water for the sewer...I wonder if the pipes would clog from salt.

Alex
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  #13  
Old 28-07-2017, 12:12 PM
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And this

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sydn...lination_Plant

Alex
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  #14  
Old 28-07-2017, 12:13 PM
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Unfortunately journalists aren't good at basic maths nor economics.

Consider instead the annual per capita cost - 4 million people over 5 years ... $25 a year.

OTOH the next time we have a prolonged drought consider the screams if it were to reach the state Golburn did last time in the early 2000's - no showers, no baths, no laundry - water to be used for essential consumption only.

I suggest most would happily forgo a trip to MacDonalds once a year if that's the price of a secure water supply.

Even if a desal plant was used to provide water to grow fruit & veg it still makes economic sense, although the environmental aspects might not be so satisfactory.

I'm surprised that aren't positively foaming at the mouth at Sydney trains spending a much bigger number - $10B - on the Waratah train fleet - whilst conveniently forgetting they move a million passengers twice every day. That's more than 20 BILLION passenger journeys in the life of the fleet, at a cost of about $2 a trip. Now consider the rather unpleasant alternative of adding a million cars on the roads and the real cost of commuting by car.

Last edited by Wavytone; 28-07-2017 at 12:35 PM.
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Old 28-07-2017, 12:32 PM
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Hi Gary
Thank you for joining the discussion.
You mention Sydney's growth...its great I am hoping to sell out for high rise it is only a matter of time.

Folk analyse why Rome collapsed, the city rather than the empire, well the barbarians ( not the Romans their attackers) trashed the water supply.

The city went from one million to ten thousand in a year...so they say.

So 5 million people have paid approx 2.5 billion over how many years say five...what is that per head and how much bottled water would that buy.

Although not a maths person I love working out that sort of thing.

But I think from the wiki link we are in it for fifty years..power comes from a wind power company...anyways the money would have provided lots of jobs and the interest on capital provided income for many retireeees.

I will save working out the sums until bedtime...working stuff out without a calculated I feel helps keep the mind working and sure helps getting off to sleep.

Again Sydney growing...I nearly drove off the road when I saw that huge development at Mt Colah...

And where you are imagine how it will go..walk to station equals high rise in the future...
Twenty stories now at Epping apparently.
Alex
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  #16  
Old 28-07-2017, 12:33 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by el_draco View Post
Wahahahaha haaaaa..

... but in all seriousness, Melbourne has just been told the'll be out of water by 2060.... discounting climate change of course, which all good conservatives know... is a Chinese/Labour/Green/Scientific conspiracy
The same people behind Sydney's Desal Plant.
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  #17  
Old 28-07-2017, 12:38 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by casstony View Post
“Recycled water produces far more water [than desalination], it’s far more reliable in terms of actual operations, it uses less power, it provides a beneficial use for ground water, it offsets surface water supplies, and it actually prevents discharges into the ocean, as opposed to creating them,” Conner says.

https://psmag.com/environment/rundow...led-wastewater
I think Malcolm should go to the next election with a promise that under his government folk will get to drink recycled sewage.

If he promises to do that I would vote for him.

Alex
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  #18  
Old 28-07-2017, 12:42 PM
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Hi Wavy
Look you can prove anything if you want to rely on facts and actual numbers.

Thanks for contributing to the discussion.

Alex
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  #19  
Old 28-07-2017, 12:42 PM
Wavytone
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Quote:
Originally Posted by xelasnave View Post
One wonders why we don't use sea water for the sewer...I wonder if the pipes would clog from salt.
Much of the infrastructure is in cement-lined cast-iron pipes. They would be destroyed very quickly if salt water was used. Secondly a lot of it is fairly leaky - to the extent salt water would quickly poison most of the land in Sydney. Most parks and gardens would die and the salt would be impossible to remove short of scraping off the top metre of everything and disposing of it somehow.

In the long term it would also poison the acquifer that lies under most of the greater Sydney basin - and that is fresh water. Not exactly potable but it's good enough for watering market gardens.

Sorry Alex - as an engineer I think about current reality and what possible alternative choices could be made, their outcome, and which one is preferable - and why.

What boils me is the way greenies and hippies try to force loopy ideas on society for ideological reasons, or worse, romantic fantasies of way things once were (I'm referring to the bush) rather than thinking about what it COULD BE in the future.

Last edited by Wavytone; 28-07-2017 at 12:53 PM.
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Old 28-07-2017, 12:45 PM
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Yes

Quote:
Originally Posted by xelasnave View Post
I think Malcolm should go to the next election with a promise that under his government folk will get to drink recycled sewage.

If he promises to do that I would vote for him.

Alex
Alex,

We are a desert continent and we don't recycle our water? Yet we have the temerity to describe ourselves as Green!
The Desal plant was never anything more than an exercise in political expedience by a desperate Gov without thought or care for the public cost, much like the NBN.

David
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