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Plans progress for desalination plant at Belmont

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A proposed Drought Response Desalination Plant at Belmont is a step closer to approval following the release an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) Amendment Report today.

Hunter Water calls on the Lower Hunter community to view the amendment report to understand changes to the initial proposal and how the water utility has responded to community feedback raised in submissions to the original EIS late last year.

Managing Director Darren Cleary says the release of the report is an important step in seeking planning approval for the plant, even though there’s no intention to start construction.

“The proposed plant is an on-the-shelf insurance policy and would provide the region with added water security in the unlikely event storage levels drop to critical levels,” Mr Cleary said.

“The proposal forms part of our portfolio of actions in response to drought, which include extensive water conservation measures, minimising water loss by reducing leakage, operating Tomago Sandbeds, and water transfers between regions.

“Water users throughout the Lower Hunter would benefit from additional water security in a severe drought under our proposal to increase the drinking water output of the proposed Drought Response Desalination Plant.

“As we foreshadowed in May, our investigations into a Drought Response Desalination Plant have informed changes we believe offer greater reliability, improved efficiency and still deliver value for money.

“The amendment report seeks planning approval for an increased plant capacity to produce up to 30 million litres of drinking water per day during an extreme drought, double the output capacity of the original design.

“We are also proposing modifications to the seawater intake, changing the design to incorporate a direct ocean seawater intake system, which involves piping seawater from about a kilometre offshore.

“Planning work indicates this system would perform considerably better across relevant criteria, including reliability, efficiency and scalability, than the originally proposed approach of collecting seawater in wells underneath Nine Mile Beach.

“Our investigations show the increase in plant capacity would have modest environmental impacts, which can largely be mitigated through the design and delivery, while providing additional water security to our region during extreme drought,” Mr Cleary said.

The EIS Amendment Report is available to view and download at the DPIE Planning Portal webpage, with the public exhibition period open until 8 October 2020.

Community members are invited to make a submission on the revised design during the public exhibition period.

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