image missing
Date: 2025-08-21 Page is: DBtxt003.php txt00018115

Country
Australia

At the moment the focus in Australia is on the Bushfire Crisis. ... Not far behind it is another Climate Change related crisis... the water crisis

Burgess COMMENTARY
Peter BurgessStatus is online Peter Burgess You Founder/CEO at TrueValueMetrics.org developing True Value Impact Accounting 4s If the purpose of all economic activity is profit, then the world is doomed. On the other hand if the purpose is a better quality of life for all people, then there is the potential for an amazing future. The latter is possible because human ingenuity has delivered amazing technology that has enormous potential for good ... but sadly has been deployed in large part for a wide variety of antisocial and simplistic unconstrained for profit manners. #TVM
Peter Burgess
Rob Anderson • 1st CEO Australia / New Zealand at FuseChange.org 1h • Edited • At the moment the focus in Australia is on the Bushfire Crisis. Not far behind it is another Climate Change related crisis... the water crisis Similar issues with political cronyism not acting in the best interests of Australians as reported in the recent Royal Commission findings. At what point do we stand up to the core issues and demand a transparent and accountable democracy in Australia. Hopefully the current bushfire outrage overcomes the misinformation campaigns. #bushfirecrisis #climatecrisis #watercrisis #truthcrisis #democracycrisis #economiccrisis #omnicrisis No alt text provided for this image “Australians have been lied to” – Murray Darling Royal Commission australiascience.tv 4 1 Comment Like Comment Share Most Relevant Peter Burgess Peter BurgessStatus is online Peter Burgess You Founder/CEO at TrueValueMetrics.org developing True Value Impact Accounting 4s If the purpose of all economic activity is profit, then the world is doomed. On the other hand if the purpose is a better quality of life for all people, then there is the potential for an amazing future. The latter is possible because human ingenuity has delivered amazing technology that has enormous potential for good ... but sadly has been deployed in large part for a wide variety of antisocial and simplistic unconstrained for profit manners. #TVM “Australians have been lied to” – Murray Darling Royal Commission Last updated April 1, 2019 at 12:21 pm Topics: OUR PLANET The Murray-Darling Royal Commission has handed down a damning finding of unlawful acts and ignoring climate change.
Local farmers walk along the banks of the Darling River. Photo by Jenny Evans/Getty Images The Murray-Darling Basin Royal Commission has found Australia’s Murray-Darling Basin Authority (MDBA) acted unlawfully and “completely ignored” climate change projections when determining water allocation. The findings of the Commission were made public on Thursday and highlighted the complex web of issues threatening the Murray which are exemplified by the recent fish deaths in the Darling River and dry riverbeds at Walgett in NSW. The report was particularly critical of the government’s failure to acknowledge scientist recommendations in the past and lack of openness when describing water management decision-making processes. Experts highly critical of MBDA The AusSMC asked Aussie experts for their take on the Commission findings in an Expert Reaction. “If there were any doubt that Australians have been lied to and hoodwinked about water reform, this report is the evidence,” said ANU’s Professor Quentin Grafton, UNESCO’s Chair in Water Economics and Transboundary Water Governance. Professor Grafton said the Royal Commission has provided an “outstanding service to the nation”, cutting through empty phrases used all-too-often by political leaders. In particular, the Royal Commission said there has been an “unfathomable predilection for secrecy. That is the bane of good science and an obstacle to the democratic and informed design and improvement of public policy”. Professor Grafton says the Royal Commission places the Murray-Darling Basin Authority as the chief culprit. Issues raised a year ago Professor John Quiggin Australian Laureate Fellow in Economics at UQ agreed that secrecy was an issue. He said these findings are consistent with criticisms put forward a year ago by independent scientists and economists in the Murray Darling Declaration. “The secretive and unaccountable processes associated with funding for water recovery projects have led to a massive waste of public money while doing little or nothing for the long-term sustainability of either irrigation or the environment,” he said. One such unaccountable process is what the government called a “Triple Bottom Line” (TBL), where economic and social factors were considered, in addition to the environment. The Commission described this as a “very unhelpful slogan” that was “probably conceived innocently [but] later morphed into a misleading and dangerous misunderstanding”. Associate Professor Darla Hatton MacDonald from the Tasmanian School of Business and Economics at the University of Tasmania said the TBL myth is an important Royal Commission highlight. “The MDBA’s interpretation is that a TBL approach could be used to justify recovering less water if doing so would benefit farming, therefore the economy and therefore society.” “Looking back, the Royal Commission suggests the point at which the MDBA erred was in reasoning the selection of scenarios should be from optimising social, economic and environmental outcomes,” she said. River health should be priority, not political gain One way to improve things that was offered by Professor Caroline Sullivan from Southern Cross University, would be to agree that managing rivers, for river health, should be the priority, rather than managing them for economic benefit or political gain. Professor Michael Stewardson, an advisor to the Murray Darling Basin Authority and Professor at the University of Melbourne, defended the current Basin plan saying water reform is a “necessarily slow and incremental process.” “The idea is that initial success builds support for further deeper reforms,” he said. While applying the recommendations of the Royal Commission might take some time, researchers hope they will start significant changes in the management of the Murray-Darling water system. Associate Professor of Hydrology and Catchment Management at the University of Sydney, Willem Vervoort, said: “Policy and science should work together in tandem to develop an improved plan and set of actions, even if we sometimes don’t like the future that science sets out.”
SITE COUNT Amazing and shiny stats
Copyright © 2005-2021 Peter Burgess. All rights reserved. This material may only be used for limited low profit purposes: e.g. socio-enviro-economic performance analysis, education and training.