Skip to content
Education Training, Environment

New study shows how quickly surface water moves to groundwater reservoirs across New South Wales

Charles Darwin University 3 mins read

A new study from Charles Darwin University (CDU), Monash University and The University of Newcastle has presented almost 100,000 estimates of groundwater recharge rates across Australia, by far the largest known database of its kind.

Groundwater recharge is the rate at which groundwater resources are replenished by rainfall, in millimetres per year (mm/y).

The recharge rates estimated for the Sydney area typically ranged between 15 and 95 mm/y, compared to values typically between 10 and 20 mm/y around Albury. In both cases, these values are only a fraction of total rainfall.

The Great Artesian Basin is an important groundwater resource in regional areas of New South Wales where rainfall is low. The recharge rates estimated for the New South Wales part of the recharge area for the Great Artesian Basin typically ranged from less than 1 mm to 75 mm/y, with an average of 10 mm/y.

CDU PhD candidate and lead author Stephen Lee said the study used recently developed approaches to estimate recharge, and several existing datasets, aiming to aid water resource managers to improve their knowledge of how water interacts with and moves through the earth.

“Previous studies of global groundwater recharge have collated around 5,000 estimates, that were generated using a range of different methods, components, and durations of time,” Mr Lee said.

“This makes it a challenge to predict regional or global-scale recharge rates. In comparison, our study has used a single method to make consistent estimates of groundwater recharge in various Australian climates. We have created a map of these points that is now available to the public.”

Researchers focused on chloride concentrations, a naturally occurring ion that is present in both fresh and salt water.

They generated a high-resolution model of recharge rates across climate zones in Australia, including arid zones in Western Australia where data has been limited.

“Our recharge rate estimates are notably lower than other studies, but we have provided more diversified coverage of arid areas, which make up most of Australia, whereas past studies were more focused on the tropics and temperate climates,” Mr Lee said.

“Along the east coast, higher rainfall, and less evaporation due to temperate and tropical climates lead to higher recharge rates, and more dry, arid regions have less rainfall and lower recharge rates.

“For example, you can compare the Top End’s low concentration of chloride in groundwater, and high rainfall, to high concentrations and low rainfall in Central and South Australia. Recharge rates generally increase the further north the area is.”

Knowledge of groundwater recharge is vital for effective water resources management. 

Mr Lee said groundwater is vital for ecosystem survival, drinking water supply, agriculture, and other primary industries in the many areas where groundwater is the only reliable water source.

The findings also highlight that climate variables such as rain, seasonality, potential evaporation from trees and vegetation significantly influence recharge rates.

"This study represents a significant step forward in groundwater recharge estimation.

“We’ve used data that is often neglected, and we hope that by making it more accessible and interactive, the study will enable researchers and the water resource management industry worldwide to better manage water resources and mitigate the impacts of climate change."

Supervisor Dr Dylan Irvine said the results could be used by researchers, government, industry and the public to understand groundwater in their region.

“Despite its importance in water resources management, we can only estimate groundwater recharge.

“Here, we’ve provided the largest groundwater recharge dataset produced anywhere, and we’ve also produced a modelled map of recharge that can be used as a starting point in investigations where no recharge estimates are available.”

The study is part of Mr Lee’s PhD project which focuses on building a large groundwater hydrochemistry database and was published in Hydrology and Earth System Sciences journal.


Contact details:

Alayna Hansen
Communications Officer (Projects)
Marketing, Media & Communications
Larrakia Country
T: +61 8 8946 7479
M: 0422 811 892
E: [email protected]
W: cdu.edu.au

Media

More from this category

  • Building Construction, Education Training
  • 12/11/2025
  • 06:09
La Trobe University

La Trobe unveils University City masterplan

La Trobe University’s Bundoora campus will house three distinct villages and a thriving city centre for Melbourne’s north under an ambitious masterplan, bringing housing…

  • Contains:
  • Environment, Science
  • 12/11/2025
  • 05:30
UNSW Sydney

Scientists unearth Australia’s ancient ‘drop crocs’

Key Facts: The discovery of Australia’s oldest known crocodile eggshells is helping UNSW scientists unlock clues to animals and ecosystems that thrived millions of years ago, before Australia became an island continent.In a local grazier’s backyard in the small southeast QLD town of Murgon, scientists have been digging for decades in what looks like an unremarkable clay pit. But within the clay lies one of Australia’s oldest fossil sites – a window back in time to when the continent was still connected to Antarctica and South America. Now, an international team led by the Institut Català de Paleontologia Miquel Crusafont…

  • Environment
  • 11/11/2025
  • 15:46
NSW Environment Protection Authority (EPA)

NEW PFAS MONITORING REQUIREMENTS OPEN FOR COMMENT

The NSW Environment Protection Authority (EPA) is consulting with licensed landfill and sewage treatment plant (STP) operators and other stakeholders on proposed new PFAS monitoring requirements. The draft Landfill and Sewage Treatment Plant PFAS Monitoring Chemical Control Order aims to establish consistent, science-based PFAS monitoring in leachate and groundwater at licensed landfills and treated effluent at Sewage Treatment Plant (STP) facilities across NSW. NSW EPA A/Executive Director of Regulatory Practice and Services, Arminda Ryan, said the data from this monitoring will inform future regulatory decisions. “This will help us understand how much PFAS enters the environment from STPs and landfills…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.