Chapter 2
Water Amendment (Long-term Average Sustainable Diversion Limit Adjustment)
Bill 2012
2.1
As mentioned in Chapter 1, submitters and witnesses raised a number of
key issues regarding both the Water Amendment (Long-term Average Sustainable
Diversion Limit Adjustment) Bill 2012 (the Adjustment Mechanism bill) and the
Water Amendment (Water for the Environment Special Account) Bill 2012 (the
Special Account bill).
2.2
Key issues relating to the Adjustment Mechanism bill are discussed in
the following sections of this chapter. Key issues regarding the Special
Account bill are discussed in Chapter 3.
Key issues regarding the bill
2.3
Many submitters were generally supportive of an adjustment mechanism and
therefore the intent of the Adjustment Mechanism bill.[1]
However, some concerns were raised about certain aspects of the bill, including:
- lack of opportunity for public participation in and consultation
on the adjustment mechanism;
- lack of ministerial discretion as to whether to adopt an adjustment
amendment to the Basin Plan; and
- whether such an amendment to the Basin Plan is a disallowable
instrument.
Transparency and consultation
2.4
The Adjustment Mechanism bill seeks to require in the Basin Plan the
inclusion of criteria for determining whether the MDBA should propose an
adjustment to the long-term average sustainable diversion limit (SDL) and the
amount of any adjustment (see paragraphs 23A(2)(a) and (b)).
2.5
However, several submitters were concerned that the details of the adjustment
mechanism—such as these criteria—have not yet been made public.[2]
For example, the NSW Irrigators' Council (NSWIC) suggested that it was 'entirely
unable to provide opinion on that matter' because the Council had not yet seen
the adjustment mechanism.[3]
The NSWIC continued, however, that it:
...reserves its right to support the adjustment mechanism
within the Draft Plan when we become privy to it. It may be the case that we
support not only that mechanism, but the legislative change to accommodate it.[4]
2.6
The National Irrigators' Council was supportive of an adjustment
mechanism but, similar to the NSWIC, was:
...concerned that Parliament would amend the Water Act to
facilitate an SDL Adjustment Mechanism, when the details of the Mechanism,
contained in the Basin Plan, have not been made public nor shown to
stakeholders. To have confidence in the SDL Adjustment Mechanism we must understand
the assumptions built into the mechanism’s models, including the "Initial
Conditions of Development", that may affect the extent to which works and
measures lead to SDL adjustments.
For this reason it is essential that the details of the SDL
Adjustment Mechanism be provided to the Parliament, stakeholders and the
community before the Water Act is amended.[5]
2.7
The Australian Dairy Industry Council (ADIC) argued:
It is unacceptable that Parliament should amend the Water Act
to facilitate an unknown adjustment mechanism on a "trust us" basis.
The Water Minister, Tony Burke, told Parliament in his second reading speech
that the amendment introduced transparency to the SDL adjustment mechanism process
– this commitment should extend to providing the details of the mechanism
itself so that Parliament, stakeholders and the community can make an informed
judgement of the Bill’s merits.[6]
2.8
Similarly, the Victorian Farmers' Federation (VFF) stated:
It is imprudent to consent to an amendment of the Act which
will enshrine the SDL Adjustment Mechanism without an understanding of what
will or will not be considered within any adjustment mechanism framework.[7]
2.9
The Department of Sustainability, Environment, Water, Population and
Communities (SEWPAC) informed the committee that '[t]he adjustment mechanism
bill is the bill that requires the plan to set out the criteria for those
adjustments'.[8]
2.10
The committee also notes that the EM states:
It is envisaged that criteria to be specified in the Basin
Plan will include that the mechanism must operate on a no-detriment basis. The
adjustments would then not be able to weaken the social, economic and
environmental outcomes inherent in the Basin Plan.[9]
Ministerial discretion
2.11
The Adjustment Mechanism bill as originally drafted would have required
the minister to adopt the recommendations of the MDBA with respect to adjusting
the long-term average SDL. Various submitters opined that the minister—and not
the MDBA—should have ultimate responsibility in this regard: that is, that the
minister should have discretion whether or not to accept the MDBA's
recommendations.[10]
2.12
Murray Irrigation argued:
...it is entirely inappropriate that an unelected authority be
charged with making changes to legislation, given the Basin Plan is a
legislative instrument, which may require significant budget allocations. As it
currently stands, the responsible Minister has oversight of the Basin Plan and
associated budgetary implications, which is how it must remain.[11]
2.13
The NSW Office of Water shared this view and stated: 'The final
responsibility for determining an SDL adjustment should be that of the
Commonwealth Minister...not an independent agency'.[12]
2.14
To address the concern about ministerial discretion, the National
Irrigators' Council recommended that the bill be amended so that the minister
'may' adopt the MDBA's recommendations on adjusting the SDL, rather than 'must'.[13]
Parliamentary oversight
2.15
Some submitters were concerned that proposed adjustments to the long-term
average SDL would not be disallowable legislative instruments thereby
circumventing the Parliament's ability to reject these adjustments.[14]
As a result, various submitters called for the adjustments to be disallowable
instruments. For example, the National Irrigators' Council stated:
NIC does not support the abrogation of Ministerial and
Parliamentary oversight and believe the Bill needs to be amended to ensure that
the Murray Darling Basin MDBA does not have the ultimate power to accept or
reject the proposed SDL Adjustments. This power must be retained by the Parliament.
As stated previously, stakeholders have no confidence in the MDBA to make a determination
taking into account stakeholder concerns.
NIC is calling for the Parliament to have a determinative
role, by allowing for the disallowance of a proposed SDL Adjustment.[15]
2.16
The ACF was also concerned that 'the Bill would prevent
effective...Parliamentary oversight of such adjustments...the Parliament would have
no power of disallowance'[16]
as was the Australian Network of Environmental Defender's Offices (ANEDO):
The Bill...indicates that adjustment amendments adopted by the
Minister will not be subject to disallowance by Parliament. Again, this is
inconsistent with [the] Water Act which indicates that the Basin Plan is a
legislative instrument that will be tabled before Parliament, and subject to
disallowance...The Bill should be amended to provide that proposed adjustment
amendments are disallowable legislative instruments.[17]
Committee comment
2.17
As outlined in Chapter 1, the Adjustment Mechanism bill was amended in
the House of Representatives on 30 October 2012, after submissions had been
received by the committee. In particular, the Adjustment Mechanism bill was
amended to:
- require that the public be consulted and their submissions
considered before the MDBA proposes an adjustment to the long-term average SDL;
- provide the relevant minister with discretion as to whether or
not to adopt an adjustment proposed by the MDBA; and
- ensure that an amendment to the Basin Plan to adjust the long-term
average SDL is a disallowable legislative instrument.
2.18
These amendments address most of the concerns raised during the course
of the inquiry regarding the Adjustment Mechanism bill. Indeed, a number of
witnesses expressed their support for the amendments.[18]
The ACF welcomed 'the amendments passed recently by the House of
Representatives'[19]
as did Murray Valley Irrigators:
We continue to support the passage of the bill. We believe
the amendments in the lower house have strengthened it in that there is greater
oversight and transparency in the system, particularly as it accrues to the
minister of water being able to reject an adjustment if he believes that is
appropriate, and the science and the modelling does not support and adjustment
to the SDL. We believe that it will go to reducing some of the political
friction between parties and lobbies—environmental, irrigator and community.[20]
2.19
On the basis that the amendments to the Adjustment Mechanism bill agreed
in the House of Representatives on 30 October resolve the concerns raised during
this inquiry regarding transparency and consultation, ministerial discretion
and parliamentary oversight, the committee recommends that the bill be passed.
Recommendation 1
2.20
The committee recommends that the Adjustment Mechanism bill as amended
in the House of Representatives on 30 October 2012 be passed.
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