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Regional Water Resource Assessment – SWMA |
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Prosser |
Prosser Surface Water Management Area is within Tasmania and is 1,152 km2
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The estimate of regional water consumption as prepared by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) includes water use within the Prosser, Little Swanport, Swan-Apsley, Scamander-Douglas, and George Surface Water Management Areas
Estimated water consumption is 5,640 ML
Agriculture comprises approximately 58% of total water consumption; Household comprises approximately 23% of total water consumption; Other comprises approximately 17% of total water consumption; Mining and Manufacturing comprise the remainder.
PLEASE NOTE: Regional estimates were derived using survey data designed to produce state- and territory-level estimates, and incorporated data from a range of other sources. The degree of confidence that can be attached to individual regional estimates is variable. In general, the estimates should be used with a moderate degree of confidence. For further details see ABS Publication 4610.0.055.002
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The categories used for the breakdown of water consumption are as per Table 2.9
of the Water Account 2004-05. "Other" in respect of the estimated water consumption
comprises water use within the following industries:
- Water supply, sewerage and drainage services
- Electricity and gas
- Forestry and fishing
- Services to Agriculture
- "Other industries"
Results of the National Water Commission’s Framework for Assessment of River and
Wetland Health for
Prosser
SWMA
This page provides a summary of the results of the National Framework for the Assessment of River and Wetland Health (FARWH) for Prosser water management area. Table 1 Results of the National Framework for the Assessment of River and Wetland Health (FARWH) for Prosser water management area
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Biota
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0.77 |
The Aquatic Biota Index provides a measure of the biological health of rivers using data on aquatic macroinvertebrates, native and exotic fish as presented in the Conservation of Freshwater Ecosystem Values Framework (CFEVF). |
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Catchment Disturbance |
0.62 |
The Catchment Disturbance Index provides a measure of human caused changes that impact the river and wetland condition and the biota.
For Tasmania the Catchment Disturbance Index is based the area of catchment land uses draining to a reach as presented in the CFEVF. |
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Hydrology Disturbance |
0.99 |
The Hydrological Disturbance Index assesses the flow regimes change that result from river regulation and/or substantial flow diversion or extraction.
For Tasmania the Hydrological Disturbance of rivers is based on the CFEVF data. |
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Physical Form |
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Physical Form was not presented for Tasmania because suitable data that met the requirements of the Framework for the Assessment of River and Wetland Health (FARWH) were not available. |
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Water Quality |
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Water quality assessment was not presented for Tasmania because suitable data meeting the needs of the FARWH were not available. |
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Fringing Zone |
0.75 |
The Fringing Zone Index is a measure of the riparian vegetation condition as determined in the CFEVF. |
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Overall Score |
0.74 |
The Overall Index for a Surface Water Management Area is a combination of the individual indices (Biota, Catchment Disturbance, Fringing Zone, and Hydrological Disturbance) to assess the overall health of the river.
For Tasmania the indices are integrated at reaches using Euclidean Distance and weighted by reach length, then aggregated to give the overall Surface Water Management area score. |
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Figure 1 Results of the National Framework for the Assessment of River and Wetland Health (FARWH) for Prosser water management area
Note: The ranges associated with the graph are described below. |
| 0.0-0.2 | severely modified | | 0.2-0.4 | substantially modified | | 0.4-0.6 | moderately modified | | 0.6-0.8 | slightly modified | | 0.8-1.0 | largely unmodified |
See the National Framework for the Assessment of River and Wetland Health (FARWH) report on the Publications page for details on the assessment method.
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This page provides high level performance indicators of water management for the
Prosser
surface water management area (SWMA) based on information provided by the government
of
Tasmania.
It provides answers to a range of questions of relevance to the National Water Initiative
(NWI), specifically in relation to:
Please note that a dash means that either the data was not
available, not provided or that the question was not relevant for a particular area.
Surface water management framework
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What is the status of the water management plan for this surface water management
area?
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Statewide policy |
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If a final or draft plan has been written, what year was it completed?
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- |
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If a final or draft plan has been written, does it consider groundwater explicitly? |
- |
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If yes, how is groundwater considered? |
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Technical assessment |
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Management decisions |
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What percentage of the surface water management area is covered by the water management
plan(s)? |
- |
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Does your water plan specify water quality objectives to meet environmental and
other public benefit outcomes? |
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Other items included in the management framework are: |
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Metering program for this area |
- |
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Effluent recycling |
- |
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Climate change |
- |
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Aquifer storage and recovery |
- |
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Household rainwater tanks |
- |
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Efficient irrigation systems |
- |
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Other |
- |
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Management plan available at: |
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Water resource caps
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Has a cap been placed on surface water usage / abstraction in this surface water
management area? |
Yes |
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Is the cap an absolute limit to allocation or provisional limit? |
Provisional |
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If there is a cap, what year was it implemented? |
1995 |
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If there is a cap, is it considered to represent the sustainable surface water yield? |
No |
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The following water usage types are included/not included under the cap: |
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Irrigation |
Included |
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Urban supply |
Included |
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Commercial / Industrial |
Included |
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Minor catchment storages |
Included |
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Minor on-stream storages |
Included |
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Minor extracted water storages |
Included |
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Stock and domestic |
Not included |
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Mining / Oil and gas |
Included |
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Forestry |
Not included |
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Floodplain harvesting |
Included |
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Drought supply |
Included |
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Greywater use |
Included |
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Effluent recycling |
Included |
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Aquifer storage and recovery |
Included |
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Does auditing of compliance with the cap occur? |
No |
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Compliance report available at:
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Surface water / groundwater interaction
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Are surface water and groundwater managed as an integrated water resource in this
surface water management area? |
No |
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Reason or method: |
Integration has not been assessed |
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Integrated management plan available at:
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Surface water sustainable yield
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The sustainable yield within this surface water management area for 2004/05 was: |
137326 ML |
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The method used to determine the sustainable yield was: |
A digital elevation model to delineate subcatchments and the Australian Water Balance Model (AWBM) to route runoff were used to derive yields at catchment outlets. |
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Was the sustainable yield determined for the combined (i.e. surface water and groundwater)
water? |
No |
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Is the cap considered to be at or below the sustainable yield of surface water? |
Below |
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What is the level of entitlements relative to the sustainable yield? |
Low level of development |
Environmental water requirements
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Have environmental water requirements been determined for this surface water management
area? |
No |
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If yes, what year were they completed?
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- |
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For regulated areas, how much of the mean annual flow is not available for allocation
and provided for the environment? (percentage of mean annual flow at locality of
river regulation) |
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Are there formal environmental water provisions for regulated rivers? |
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If so, what method was used to determine environmental water provisions for regulated
rivers? |
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For what percentage of the rivers are provisions made? |
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Maps illustrating which rivers have provisions available at: |
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Do the environmental water provisions consider groundwater?
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If yes, how? |
- |
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Completed Environmental Flows Reports available at: |
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Surface water diversions
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The total surface water diversion in the surface water management area for 2004/05
was: |
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What percentage of surface water diversion is determined from metered data? |
0 % |
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What is the level of diversions relative to the sustainable yield? |
Low level of diversions (0 - 29%) |
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For surface water diversion that is NOT metered, how was the surface water diversion
determined for 2004/05? |
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Estimated from irrigated areas |
No |
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Estimated from licence volume |
Yes |
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Estimated from power usage for pumps |
No |
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Estimated from models |
No |
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Other |
- |
Surface water entitlements
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Entitlements for surface water are required/not required for the following usage
types:
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Irrigation |
Required |
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Urban supply |
Required |
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Commercial / Industrial |
Required |
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Minor catchment storages |
Required |
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Minor on-stream storages |
Required |
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Minor extracted water storages |
Required |
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Stock and domestic |
Not required |
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Mining / Oil and gas |
Required |
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Forestry |
Not required |
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Floodplain harvesting |
- |
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Drought supply |
- |
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Greywater use |
- |
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Effluent recycling |
- |
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Aquifer storage and recovery |
- |
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Other |
- |
Protected terrestrial areas
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Each of the following protection types cover a percentage of the surface water management
area as detailed:
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Habitat/species management area |
- |
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Managed resource protected areas |
0.40 |
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National park |
7.68 |
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Natural monument |
0.16 |
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Protected landscape/seascape |
- |
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Strict nature reserve |
- |
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Wilderness area |
- |
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Total |
8.25 |
Related links
The links below provide access to similar data reports for groundwater management
units (GMUs) that overlap this surface water management area (SWMA).
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