Skip to content
Environment, Immigration

Population growth weakening Australia’s water security: new report

Sustainable Population Australia 4 mins read

 

Water demand due to population growth is outstripping improvements in Australians’ efficiency of household water use, according to new research commissioned by Sustainable Population Australia (SPA) in a report titled Big thirsty Australia: how population growth threatens our water security and sustainability

“Since 2010-11, per person water use in the household sector has remained relatively stable.  It is becoming harder to find new efficiencies; the low-hanging fruit such as public educational campaigns, water efficiency labelling for appliances and reduced garden size, have been picked,” says Dr Peter Cook, one of the authors of the report.

The report finds the demand pressures from population growth are coming at the same time as climate change is drying capital city water catchments in what is already the driest inhabited continent. Together these factors are making Australia’s cities more vulnerable to extended droughts, the report says.

“Since the early 2000s, water demand in many Australian cities has exceeded what can be supplied reliably by conventional means, namely rainfall and groundwater,” says another of the report authors, Dr Jonathan Sobels.

Dr Jonathan Sobels and Dr Peter Cook are two of the co-authors of a new report on Australia's water security commissioned by Sustainable Population Australia (SPA).

The report finds that water demand projections by mainland urban water authorities anticipate further population growth will require adding anywhere from 850 gigalitres (GL) to over 1450 GL to annual water supply to capital cities over the next several decades. (A gigalitre is equal to one billion litres of water, which would fill a cube 100 metres in each direction, or 400 Olympic swimming pools.) For purposes of comparison, 1450 GL is around the total volume of water currently supplied each year for Sydney, Melbourne and Perth combined.

“State governments and water utilities are turning to desalination of seawater to augment water supply to meet population growth. Yet desalination is hugely expensive. Per litre of water, desalination is at least 2.5 times the cost of rain-fed dam water, which means much higher water bills for households and businesses,” Dr Sobels says.

“Desalination is also energy intensive; electrical energy costs are around 41% of the operating costs for these plants. Even if renewable energy is used, it will not be displacing fossil fuels used in other sectors, so it does not improve carbon footprint or sustainability. There are also risks with the siting of these coastal desalination plants, due to the likelihood of sea level rise because of climate change,” Dr Sobels adds.

Peter Strachan, SPA National President, is available for comment 
on the new report, on 0412 400 952.

SPA national president Peter Strachan says official government projections see Australia’s population growing by another 13 million in the next 40 years.

“The huge costs of desalination can be avoided simply by stabilising Australia’s population. As this new report demonstrates, it is population growth that is driving water demand. Relying on more desalination to perpetuate population growth will introduce new vulnerabilities to our water security and further degrade our environment,” Mr Strachan says.

“The report questions why State and Local governments simply accept population growth projections dictated by the federal Treasury department. Yet it is the States who are left to fund the infrastructure and provide the extra water.  They need to understand that future population growth is a policy choice, not an inevitability.

“It would be far simpler, safer, greener and cheaper to stabilise our population, by bringing annual net migration back to the pre-2005 level of around 70,000, which is what it was before successive recent governments’ foolish experiment with hyper-growth. Then we could direct our investments to fixing existing ageing water infrastructure and putting more water into greening our cities and regenerating wetlands,” says Mr Strachan.

The above graph shows that daily per-person water use in the household sector has remained relatively stable since 2010-11, after considerable efficiency gains in prior years.

 

A new report on water security, commissioned by Sustainable Population Australia, will be available from 25 November 2024 at https://population.org.au/discussion-papers/

An advance copy of the report may also be provided directly on request.  Please contact us at [email protected] if you are interested.

 


About us:

Sustainable Population Australia (SPA) is an independent not-for-profit organisation seeking to protect the environment and our quality of life by ending population growth in Australia and globally, while rejecting racism and involuntary population control. SPA is an environmental advocacy organisation, not a political party.


Contact details:


Peter Strachan
National President
0412 400 952
[email protected]

Dr Peter Cook and Dr Jonathan Sobels
Report Authors
0427 709 456

Michael Bayliss
SPA Communications Manager
[email protected]

Media

More from this category

  • Environment, Transport Automotive
  • 12/12/2025
  • 14:27
NALSPA

Electric Car Discount review must drive clean energy transition and cost-of-living relief

The National Automotive Leasing and Salary Packaging Association (NALSPA) has today welcomed the federal government’s announcement of the statutory review of the Electric Car Discount, noting that the policy continues to be highly effective in encouraging Australians to make the switch to cleaner cars.The federal government announced today that next year it will review the Electric Car Discount, otherwise known as the EV FBT exemption which came into effect in July 2022.The review will consider the operation of the Electric Car Discount over the first three years it has been in place, as required by the legislation.“We will actively participate…

  • Banking, Environment
  • 12/12/2025
  • 10:38
Australian Conservation Foundation

NAB shareholders owning $9.74bn in shares call on the bank to do better on deforestation

Investors owning $9.74 billion of shares in Australia’s largest agribusiness bank have backed a resolution calling on NAB to disclose deforestation linked to its lending.* The resolution on disclosure of financed deforestation, facilitated by the Australian Conservation Foundation and co-filed by SIX, Australian Ethical, Melior Investment Management, was supported by 13.98% of shares voted at NAB’s AGM today. A second resolution, calling on the bank to set out a strategy to eliminate financed deforestation, was supported by 10.39% of NAB shares voted. Jolene George, head of corporate advocacy at the Australian Conservation Foundation, said: “The support for the resolution on…

  • Environment
  • 12/12/2025
  • 10:34
UNSW Sydney

Droughts lasting longer across Australia, study shows

A studytracking not only the forces that drive drought but the damage it leaves behind has revealed that droughts have lasted longer in Australia in recent decades, especially in areas with the most people and farms. UNSW researchers analysed drought trends across Australia between 1911 and 2020 based on rainfall shortages and falling river and dam levels. Their analysis showed that, since 1971, the time spent under drought conditions has increased across most of Australia, especially in the southeast and southwest, which are densely populated and key breadbaskets. The increasing dryness was especially felt during winter and spring, which are…

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.