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Oolloo Dolostone Aquifer water allocation plan

Current planOolloo Dolostone Aquifer water allocation plan 2019 - 2029
MapOolloo Dolostone water allocation plan map
Area 5,277km2
Declared 13 November 2019
Duration 10 years
Review Every 5 years
Expiry 12 November 2029

The plan is applies to all groundwater within the Oolloo Dolostone Aquifer (ODA) and all surface water discharges derived from that aquifer.

It covers 0.39% of the Northern Territory (NT) and 1.60% of the entire Daly Roper Beetaloo water control district (WCD).

Plan objectives

The main objectives are to:

  • protect the environmental and cultural values of the region
    • particularly focusing on groundwater base flows to the Daly River and other groundwater dependent ecosystems
  • protect existing consumptive beneficial uses of groundwater
  • enable development of the groundwater resource to realise its potential for use in the region
  • communicate plan objectives, management principles and resource status
  • establish a framework for learning and continuous improvement to maximise environmental, social and economic outcomes.

For more information about objectives, strategies and performance indicators, read the ODA water allocation plan 2019 – 2029.

Announced allocations

Read announced allocation (AA) decisions for the current plan area:

Read more about AA.

Beneficial uses

The beneficial uses of water in a WCD are:

  • environment
  • Aboriginal economic development.

The Administrator may set other categories and publish a notice in the Gazette.

The beneficial uses of water and water quality objectives for the Daly Roper Beetaloo WCD were declared on 10 April 2019 in Gazette G15 PDF (264.0 KB).

Water resources

Surface and groundwater are closely connected in the ODA water allocation plan. The dry season flows of the Daly River and its perennial tributaries are dependent on groundwater discharge from the ODA and TLA.

Springs and seepage zones deliver water from the saturated aquifer to the river. The aquifer is recharged by high rainfall during the wet season.

Surface water

The Daly River has a catchment area of 53,000 km2 and has the largest flow of all rivers in the NT. The main tributary is the Katherine River.

Other important tributaries are the Flora, Fergusson, Edith and Douglas rivers. At the start of the plan, there were no large surface water storages on the Daly River or its tributaries.

Allocations

Surface water is allocated to environmental, cultural, rural stock and domestic, and agriculture beneficial uses.

Licences

There are 4 surface water licences for agricultural use subject to the plan with a maximum entitlement of 1,270 ML per year. Water can be taken from the Katherine River at any time of the year.

For this reason, they are managed as part of the ODA consumptive pool and not under surface water extraction policy. They are treated like groundwater licences and managed in a similar way subject to the same announced allocation conditions.

View the licences.

Groundwater

The ODA is part of the Daly geological basin, with Tindall Limestone Foundation at the bottom, and the Jinduckin, Oolloo Dolostone and the Florina formations at the top.

The greatest recharge to the ODA occurs at points where it outcrops (intersects with the surface). Some recharge occurs where the formation is covered by sediment and it also recharges through sinkholes. At points where the Florina formation overlies the ODA, there is no recharge.

Where the ODA receives recharge through sinkholes, there is a risk of contamination.

Groundwater flows through the aquifer from the southeast to the northwest and discharges at low points in the landscape where it outcrops. The greatest discharge from the aquifer is along the middle reaches of the Daly River, around the confluence of the Daly River and Stray Creek.

Allocations

The water allocation plan identifies 3 groundwater management zones where an estimated sustainable yield has been established. This is the amount of water that can be taken while meeting the needs of environmental and cultural values of the water resource.

The table below shows the volume of water available under the estimated sustainable yield from each of the groundwater management zones in the water allocation plan. It also shows the estimated rural stock and domestic use, and the current level of entitlements.

The level of existing entitlements at the time the plan was declared has caused the northern management zone to be over allocated by 990ml per year.

Water management zoneEstimated sustainable yield (ML/year)Estimated rural stock and domestic use (ML/year)Existing entitlements (ML/year)
Southern2980094623795
Central3637840217139
Northern3070020431466
Total97300155272400

Licences

The 40 groundwater extraction licences in the ODA water allocation plan are allocated mostly for agriculture with a small amount of industry beneficial use.

View the licences.

Aboriginal water reserves

The plan establishes a strategic Aboriginal water reserve. The allocation for all groundwater management zones is 19,314ML per year.

At the time of the plan’s release, 9,825ML per year was available.

Recovery of unused water has allowed the central management zone to be fully provisioned and the southern management zone to be 88% provisioned. The other 3,677ML per year remains a notional allocation until such time as water becomes available.

Management zoneAWR total (ML/year)AWR availability (ML/year)Percent provisioned (%)Water granted from the AWR (ML/year)
Southern5353472488.220
Central10913109131000
Northern3048000
Total193141563780.960

Contact

If you have any questions about permits or licensing requirements in the area, email water.licensing@nt.gov.au.

For water planning enquiries, email waterresources@nt.gov.au.