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General Category => News Views & Press Releases => Topic started by: rayke1938 on July 18, 2012, 07:47:25 AM

Title: Paradise dam problem.
Post by: rayke1938 on July 18, 2012, 07:47:25 AM
Did anyone see this story in yesterdays courier wail.
THE Paradise Dam has become a $240 million killing machine for hundreds of fish, including the threatened lungfish.

The fishways which were an important condition of the dam being built in 2005 do not work and the dam's stepped spillway is a death trap.

The $20 million fishways were supposed to allow the animals to swim past the dam wall in either direction. Going upstream, they are transported by a "fish lift" which uses large bins to transport them over the dam. Going downstream, the fish are supposed to swim into a large pipe which delivers them to the bottom of the dam wall.

Instead they are being killed on the spillway, which - rather than being smooth - was designed with a series of steps to dissipate water energy. In overflows, fish, turtles and eels are smashed to their deaths on the concrete steps.

A study by government-owned agency SunWater found the spillway, 80km south-west of Bundaberg, was killing lungfish at such a rate that it would have a major impact on their numbers.

In 22 days, 733 fish were killed when washed over the dam's spillway, of which 152 were large lungfish.

SunWater yesterday declined to respond to questions on the fishways or the stepped wall.

A spokeswoman said its reports had gone to the Agriculture Department for a response.

"SunWater will work closely with the department ... and consult with stakeholders to address issues raised in the report," she said.

Water Minister Mark McArdle said he would immediately request a full briefing.

"If this information is correct it would be of serious concern to me and the Government," he said.

The controversial dam, finished in 2005, was an election promise by former Labor premier Peter Beattie. At the time, Labor was being pressured by the sugar industry for more irrigation supplies.

The then-Opposition backed farmers, labelling the government anti-infrastructure.

Barrister Chris McGrath, who lost a court case in which he argued the fishways did not work, said the study covered only fish that were found, not those swept away and focused only on 2010, not last year's floods in which more animals would have died.

"It must be complete carnage," he said.

Dr McGrath called on SunWater to convert the stepped structure to a smooth spillway.
(http://i240.photobucket.com/albums/ff255/rayke1938/brand%20new/paradise.png)
 and this cute photo in similar story on ABC net.
(http://i240.photobucket.com/albums/ff255/rayke1938/brand%20new/lungie.png)
Cheers
Ray