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Outlook> 2007
> September
New initiative to save water
WESTERN Australia's Premier Alan Carpenter has launched a new
initiative designed to help Western Australian householders reduce
their water use and save money.
Water Corporation accounts now include extra information to better
equip householders to use water more efficiently and meet the climate
change challenge.
"Declining rainfall and a drying climate in Western Australia means the
provision of a sustainable and climate independent water supply is
becoming more and more expensive," Mr Carpenter said.
"This means that the cost of water will continue to rise.
"We need to ensure people have the information and the opportunity to
use their water more efficiently and cut household costs at the same
time.
"These new water accounts will provide that information and complement
the State Government's highly successful Waterwise rebate program."
Water accounts will now include a water use comparison graph* so
householders can compare their current water use to previous years and
to the average water use in their own suburb.
"There will also be details on Waterwise tips, water meter readings,
daily average use and water use prices for the year ahead," the Premier
said.
Mr Carpenter said Western Australia was recognised as the nation's leader in water resource management.
"We were the first State in the nation to build a desalination plant.
Other States are now following our lead and the Kwinana desalination
plant is attracting people from all over the world," he said.
"We also have a diverse range of strategies in place to secure the
Western Australia's future water supply, including a second
desalination plant, dramatically increasing water recycling and
maintaining and encouraging water trading.
"We have also had a great response from the Western Australia community to our push to use water more efficiently.
"In the past five years, through a range of conservation measures,
including the two-day sprinkler roster and the Waterwise rebate
program, the Western Australia community has saved about 45 billion
litres of water annually - the same amount produced each year by the
Kwinana desalination plant.
"And a recent Australian Bureau of Statistics report in relation to
water and energy use in Perth detailed dramatic increases in the number
of Perth households installing dual flush toilets (36 per cent in 1992
increasing to 84 per cent in 2006); water efficient shower heads (21
per cent in 1992 to 51 per cent in 2006); and front loading washing
machines (25 per cent in 2006 - almost double the 14 per cent of 2003
and more than triple the seven per cent of 1992).
"This combined effort has seen Perth become the only major capital city
in Australia without total sprinkler bans through summer - despite our
driest year on record last year.
"However, we can't be complacent."
In recognition of this, the State Government has put a strong focus on
a range of initiatives designed to reduce water costs including:
- extending the Waterwise rebate program with $18million over the next two years;
- introducing State-wide restrictions on the use of bore watering systems;
- introducing the 'Five Star Plus' building initiative
which will see new building standards requiring all new homes to have
water and energy saving devices, which have the potential to nearly
halve household water and energy bills; and
- setting a target of reducing residential water use
from the current average of 106 kilolitres per person per year to
less than 100 kilolitres per person per year.
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