Labor’s new Murray-Darling Basin Plan deal entrenches water injustice for First Nations

Source:anonymous Time:October 17, 2023

The federal government has struck a new deal with most of the states in the nation’s largest river system. The agreement, announced last week, extends the $13 billion 2012 Murray-Darling Basin Plan to rebalance water allocated to the environment, irrigators and other uses.

Environment and Water Minister Tanya Plibersek said the government has:

negotiated a way to ensure there is secure and reliable water for communities, agriculture, industry, First Nations and the environment.

But there is no mention of water for First Nations in the agreement. This follows a history of Indigenous peoples being shortchanged by Murray-Darling Basin planning. Yet again, this latest deal ignores First Nations’ interests, despite millennia of custodianship.

Shortchanged in reforms

The Murray-Darling Basin Plan was agreed in 2012 to try and improve the health of the largest and most complex river system in Australia.

It was a historic compromise that sought to address the often conflicting demands of states, irrigators and the environment. But the plan overlooked First Nations rights to own, manage and control water on Country. The plan’s current provisions include only weak requirements for governments to “have regard to” First Nations values and uses.

In 2018 the Turnbull government put $40 million on the table for First Nations. This deal offered a glimmer of hope as it saw the then water minister David Littleproud and Labor water spokesperson Tony Burke commit the funds to support Basin First Nations’ investment in cultural and economic water entitlements.

But despite Labor renewing the commitment as part of its 2022 election platform, the money remains with government and has not been spent. Last week, Plibersek said that when Labor came into government there was “very little work done about how this might happen”, and that “it is proceeding”.

A commitment of $40 million is also a paltry amount in the context of the wider river basin. Water research firm Aither’s 2023 Water Market Report estimates the total value of water entitlements in the southern basin as $32.3 billion, so the government commitment of $40 million is only 0.1% of the total.

The heritage-listed stone Brewarrina fish traps on the Barwon River, which feeds into the Darling River. John Carnemolla, Shutterstock

Shortchanged in the market

First Nations organisations have maintained pressure on the federal government and attempted to hold successive ministers to account for unnecessary delays in delivering the funding.

These delays mean the committed funds are decreasing in value.

When Littleproud initially committed the $40 million, the money was equally split between the northern and southern regions of the basin. Aither analysis conducted for the Murray Lower Darling Rivers Indigenous Nations shows at today’s prices, the $20 million for Nations in the southern basin can only buy two-thirds of the water that could have been acquired in 2018. In 2023, buying the same volume of water that could have been purchased in 2018 will cost almost $11 million more.

A fair go: investment and reform needed

Limited government investment from other sources has supported some Basin First Nations to develop plans that could guide water use, to nourish their Country, maintain culture, and generate sustainable livelihoods.

However, realising these opportunities means they need water. In an overallocated river system, amid water scarcity and rising prices, this requires genuine political will coupled with necessary reforms and adequate funding.

As another drought looms, and water entitlement prices remain high, more than 40 Basin Nations must share very limited funding that can only acquire a tiny – and diminishing – fraction of their water needs. These deals demonstrate sustained and systemic bipartisan political indifference to First Nations’ inherent rights.

If Plibersek is sincere about delivering “secure and reliable water” for First Nations, she must listen to First Nations people, and actually deliver tangible outcomes. Governments must urgently commit adequate funding for First Nations in the basin to secure water that meets our needs, before future generations are priced out of the market forever.

Funding for cultural flows must be coupled with reform to transform the foundations of water governance and implement the Echuca Declaration. This declaration establishes cultural flows as the “inherent rights” of all First Nations in the Basin.

As a start, the Water Act 2007 needs to be strengthened to enshrine Basin Nations’ authority and ensure their voices are heard.

As the terms of the basin plan implementation are being reassessed and renegotiated, governments have an opportunity not only to listen, but also to deal First Nations in.

Grant Rigney, , Indigenous Knowledge; Erin O'Donnell, Senior Lecturer, Melbourne Law School, The University of Melbourne; Fred Hooper, Indigenous knowledge holder, Indigenous Knowledge, and Lana D. Hartwig, Adjunct Research Fellow, Australian Rivers Institute, Griffith University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. 

RECENT POSTS

Africa’s underground water resources are under pressure from climate change - how to manage them

All countries have a variety of water resources – some are on the surface, like rivers, and some are beneath the ground. This groundwater provides almost...
October 17, 2023
Africa’s underground water resources are under pressure from climate change - how to manage them

Resolving water crisis ‘As important as reaching net zero’

​​​​​​​Resolving the water crisis is as essential to the world as reaching net zero carbon emissions and reducing the impact of climate change.This is ac...
October 17, 2023
Resolving water crisis ‘As important as reaching net zero’

Desalination: a promising solution for Egypt's water crisis

Egypt is a country with a limited water supply. The country's only major river, the Nile, provides about 97% of Egypt's water. The Nile is a seasonal ri...
October 17, 2023
Desalination: a promising solution for Egypt's water crisis

Discover One of the Oldest and Largest Bison Herds in the U.S.

Key PointsThe bison population in North America once numbered in the tens of millions.European hunters practically eradicated bison in the West, resulting in...
October 17, 2023
Discover One of the Oldest and Largest Bison Herds in the U.S.

How Long Can Rats Hold Their Breath?

When a city like New York starts flooding, a common question that comes to mind is… what happens to all the rats? New York City is home to tons of rats who s...
October 17, 2023
How Long Can Rats Hold Their Breath?

Discover the Only Bears That Can Live and Survive in the Jungle

With their thick fur, enormous claws, and unique lumbering gait, bears are some of the most iconic creatures on the planet. These large and powerful mammals l...
October 17, 2023
Discover the Only Bears That Can Live and Survive in the Jungle

The Top 5 Most Beautiful College Campuses in California

Going to college is one of the most important choices an 18-year-old will make. It’s where you’ll meet some of your best friends, make some of your best mem...
October 17, 2023
The Top 5 Most Beautiful College Campuses in California

Discover the Tallest Building in New Jersey (and Where It Ranks in the World)

New Jersey is known for many things including being the home of Carlo’s Bakery from Cake Boss, Jersey Shore, and Atlantic City. The state is also next-door n...
October 17, 2023
Discover the Tallest Building in New Jersey (and Where It Ranks in the World)

Do Birds Have Ears? How They Hear and 5 Amazing Facts

Birds are some of the most majestic creatures in existence. The way they soar through the sky when they’re getting from point A to point B is beautiful to wi...
October 17, 2023
Do Birds Have Ears? How They Hear and 5 Amazing Facts

Considering Artificial Turf for Your Yard and Own a Dog? 5 Critical Things to Know

News flash: Artificial turf isn’t just for football fields anymore! Getting it installed in place of your typical residential grass yard has become a popular...
October 17, 2023
Considering Artificial Turf for Your Yard and Own a Dog? 5 Critical Things to Know

CATEGORY