Skip to content
Environment

KU-RING-GAI COUNCIL FINED FOR WATER POLLUTION INCIDENT

NSW EPA < 1 mins read

Ku-ring-gai Council has been issued a $30,000 Penalty Infringement Notice after a leachate leak from a legacy landfill beneath the North Turramurra Golf Course in July 2025.

The NSW Environment Protection Authority (EPA) was made aware of the incident on 10 July, when council reported that a pump used to manage leachate from the old landfill failed allowing contaminated water to enter a nearby unnamed creek.

EPA Executive Director Operations Steve Beaman said Council was fortunate the incident didn’t escalate further.

“The risk here for the surrounding environment was very high and real as the creek flows towards Ku-ring-gai Chase National Park,” Mr Beaman said.

“When our officers collected water samples from the creek, they found the slow flow of the leak meant polluted water was contained to around a 30-metre stretch of creek, so fortunately pollution did not reach the Park.

“We expect all our licensees to maintain equipment and infrastructure properly to avoid incidents like this, and allowing a pump to leak into a waterway is not acceptable.”

Leachate is wastewater generated by landfills and when it enters a waterway, it carries pollutants like ammonia that reduce oxygen levels and can harm aquatic life.

When council reported the leak, EPA officers attended the site and issued clean up directions requiring council to stop the leak and clean up the creek. Council installed a replacement pump to stop the discharge.

Following the clean up, the EPA issued a Prevention Notice requiring Council to investigate and strengthen leachate management at the site. The EPA has received a report from Council with recommendations for the site and is considering the report.


Contact details:

ISAAC CAREY | 0436

 646 346

24-hour Media Line (02) 9995 6415 [email protected]

More from this category

  • Environment, Science
  • 09/01/2026
  • 06:00
Monash University

Scientists find microbes enhance the benefits of trees by removing greenhouse gases

Key points Researchers have revealed trillions of microbes live in the bark of every tree Tree microbes clean the air by removing greenhouse and…

  • Contains:
  • Animal Animal WelfareRights, Environment
  • 08/01/2026
  • 11:26
Humane World for Animals Australia

Queensland Government greenlights cruelty in decision to reverse flying fox shooting phase-out

SYDNEY (January 8, 2026) Humane World for Animals Australia (formerly called Humane Society International) has criticised the CrisafulliGovernment’s decisionto reverse the former government’s phase-out…

  • Contains:
  • Environment, Oil Mining Resources
  • 08/01/2026
  • 10:11
Friends of the Earth Australia/Rainforest Action Group

CHINESE TAKEOVER OF SOLGOLD WON’T ERASE PROBLEMS

CHINESE TAKEOVER OF SOLGOLD WON’T ERASE PROBLEMS MEDIA RELEASE 8 January 2026 Please attribute all quotes below to Liz Downes, member of Rainforest Action Group, Director of Rainforest Information Centre. Chinese mining giant Jiangxi Copper has been given the go-ahead to take over SolGold in a US $1.2 billion (AU$1.69 billion) deal. The aggressive bid has Jiangxi Copper paying a 43% premium over November 2024 trading prices. The move strengthens Chinese mining positions in Ecuador, with the only other currently operational copper mine in the country – Mirador – also a Chinese asset. LargeSolGold shareholders BHP and Newmont previously expressed…

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.