Falling Darling flows hit Murray River water users, says MP

A VISITING Victorian MP has expressed concern about the impact the reduction in flows in the Darling-Barka River is having on the state during a tour with a delegation of mid-Murray farmers.

Independent Member for Shepparton District Suzanna Sheed and a convoy of water stakeholders are on a learning tour of the northern Murray-Darling Basin this week to better understand lower Darling water issues.

The 15-person delegation, made up of Shepparton farmers, water stakeholders and councillors, travelled from Wentworth to Menindee on Monday, meeting farmers and floodplain graziers.

“One of the recurring issues for Victoria, which we garnered from our friends in New South Wales, is that the threshold where New South Wales has to relinquish control of its water in Menindee to the Murray-Darling Basin Authority is rarely reached,” Ms Sheed said.

The Menindee Lakes are controlled by the NSW Government.

But if water storage at the lakes increases to more than 640 gigalitres, a clause in the water management terms means control of the lake system will shift to the multi-state Murray-Darling Basin Authority.

South West Water Users Association chairman Howard Jones, who is travelling in the delegation, said his network of farmers and graziers estimated between 450GL and 650GL of water could arrive in Menindee in coming weeks after widespread rainfall across Darling-Barka tributaries in Queensland and NSW.

Large volumes of water are travelling down rivers including the Balonne, Condamine, Macintyre, Gwydir and Namoi after heavy rainfall in the headwaters, but could take six to seven weeks to reach Menindee, he said.

But it was “incredibly difficult” to gauge water volumes from official sources, including the NSW Department of Environment, Energy and Science, he said, and his network was taking its own readings of water gauges and sharing information by email to calculate totals.

Widespread floodplain harvesting across the northern basin meant a significant amount of water could be siphoned off by landholders before it reached the Darling-Barka, he said, and final volumes would not be known until water actually arrived in Menindee.

Estimates of water volumes headed for Menindee had been “dropping startlingly” over the last week, he said, with original estimates of between 700 to 1000GL falling by almost half.

“What we’re hearing anecdotally is that most of the dams (on properties on northern basin tributaries) are full,” he said. “(Property owners) are now pumping water on to paddocks”.

In March, member for Murray Helen Dalton labelled a new regulation by NSW Water Minister Melinda Pavey to allow floodplain harvesting “sneaky” and “underhanded”.

The Water Management (General) Amendment (Emergency Works Exemption) Regulation 2021, which was passed with “no warning” while NSW Parliament wasn’t sitting, allows irrigators to take unlimited amounts of water in the event of an “emergency”.

Ms Pavey said the legislation had “nothing to do with floodplain harvesting” but confirmed the definition of “emergency” was left open. “There is nothing else I can say as to how we define what is emergency and what is not emergency,” she said.

The Menindee Lakes system holds 322GL and sits at 18.6 per cent capacity.

The main two lakes used for water storage at Menindee — Lake Wetherell and Lake Pamamaroo — take up to 500GL capacity.

Above that capacity, the NSW Government will have to decide whether to fill up Lake Menindee or send the water down to Lake Victoria for South Australian use.

Mr Jones said he expected Ms Pavey to attempt to keep capacity at the lakes below the 640GL threshold to maintain NSW control.

Speaking to a webinar organised by the NSW Farmer Writers Association earlier this year, Ms Pavey said “keeping (Menindee Lakes) within (NSW) control and managing our water for our citizens is really important, and we’ve got work and a focus on that currently”.

Ms Sheed said if the NSW Government allowed Lake Menindee to fill up and transferred control of the water from NSW to the Murray Darling Basin Authority, it would benefit both Menindee and Victorian communities on the Murray River.

“The Goulburn Valley, Sunraysia and all of Victoria would benefit from that,” she said.

“That means there’s credit for Victoria for some of that water that’s flowing down to South Australia.

“Two decades ago, around 39 per cent of South Australia’s water entitlements were supplied by the Darling River, according to a 2000 report by the Murray-Darling Basin Authority.”

When less water flows down the Darling-Barka, “the Murray River and the storages along the Murray have to make up for the water that doesn’t come down the Darling River,” she said.

Since 2016, Sunraysia’s expanding horticulture industries have relied on increasing quantities of water through inter-valley trade (IVT) from the Goulburn Water, which flows through Ms Sheed’s Shepparton electorate.

Ms Sheed said the high flows had been “very damaging” to Goulburn River ecosystems.

A Victorian Government review into IVT rules will end in June.

“The whole basin is connected — the north and the south, we’re one basin,” Ms Sheed said. “What happens in the north … affects all of us along the Murray River.”

The delegation will visit communities across northern NSW and southern Queensland this week.

Digital Editions


  • A new school year

    A new school year

    AS a new school year approaches, I would like to wish our teachers, students, staff and families a great year ahead. Whether you are just…

More News

  • Strip prepped for top fuel drags

    Strip prepped for top fuel drags

    THE Twilight Nationals at Mildura’s Sunset Strip are only days away, with a combined effort between the Sunraysia Drag Racing Association, local supporters, local top fuel champion Phil Lamattina, and…

  • Mildura Basketball Association – results

    Mildura Basketball Association – results

    Tuesday, 27 January A Men Irymple Senior Men Def Wildcats A Men 38–23 Cobras A Men Def Saints A Men 92–37 Demons A Men Def Hawks Senior A Men 42–40…

  • Workshop to support food resilience

    Workshop to support food resilience

    SUNRAYSIA Community Health Services has started its OzHarvest NEST program with the aim of encouraging healthy eating in the region. The NEST program is a six-week workshop program run by…

  • Farmers call for clarification

    Farmers call for clarification

    PEAK lobby group NSW Farmers is calling for an update to the primary production definition to support farm diversification in the face of rising input costs. The current exemption to…

  • Report confirms homelessness fears

    Report confirms homelessness fears

    THERE are fears regional Victoria’s homeless crisis could get worse before it gets better with new figures showing the state has the lowest proportion of social housing in the nation.…

  • Wine exports follow changing habits

    Wine exports follow changing habits

    AUSTRALIAN Wine exports fell by 8 per cent in 2025 to a value of $2.34 billion accoriding to data from the Wine Australia’s latest Export Report. The decline in overseas…

  • Bromham are all about the music

    Bromham are all about the music

    MEMBERS of popular Adelaide indie music band Bromham have said they are looking forward to performing at the Cullulleraine Music Festival from Friday 20 March to Sunday 22 March. Lead…

  • Biosecurity plan open for feedback

    Biosecurity plan open for feedback

    PEOPLE are being encouraged to have their say on a Biosecurity Strategy Implementation Plan that’s being put together to help address the impacts of diseases and pests. The plan outlines…

  • True romance trumps motherly love

    True romance trumps motherly love

    ‘TIS the season for love with Valentine’s Day only a few weeks away. Where women hope for chocolates, flowers, wine, and a date night, and men run into Woolies on…

  • Swimmers anxious for pool reopening

    Swimmers anxious for pool reopening

    MILDURA Waves Aquatic Centre’s 50-metre outdoor pool is anticipated to finally reopen tomorrow (Saturday) following water quality testing. For the past week’s heatwave, Mildura locals have had to find other…