“High storage levels will provide good water supplies for planned environmental watering actions across Victoria in 2024-25,” the VEWH chief executive officer Sarina Loo said.
“The Bureau of Meteorology is predicting below-average to average rainfall and above-average temperatures for various regions through winter 2024, but we expect forecast water availability will support planned environmental watering in all climate scenarios,” Dr Loo said.
The plan outlines environmental watering actions for the ‘boom and bust’ cycles of floods, drought and everything else in between for the Gippsland, central, western and northern regions of Victoria.
Targeted flows in some northern Victorian waterways, including Lower Broken Creek and Gunbower Creek, will support native fish populations to recover from the major impacts of the extended hypoxic blackwater conditions and floods in 2022-23 and early 2024.
Some wetlands will be drawn down following recent wet years to support important dry-phase waterbird feeding and plant growth across the landscape.
Other wetlands in northern Victoria, such as Kunat Kunat and Lake Elizabeth, will be topped up with environmental water to sustain native fish like the Murray hardyhead and native plants.
With environmental water availability expected to be high, the VEWH will consider selling up to 45 Gl of its allocation water in the Goulburn, Murray and Campaspe systems throughout the watering year if foreseeable environmental demands can be met.
Trade will occur anytime during the 2024-25 water year.
The VEWH and waterway managers from nine catchment management authorities and Melbourne Water have engaged with Traditional Owners, technical experts and communities to use local and specialist knowledge and experience in planning environmental watering for 2024-25.