|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : 1998
Australian Elections
Sydney's water crisis--a systemic failure
Comment by Carol Divjak, SEP candidate for the Senate in NSW
11 September 1998
With every passing day, it has become increasingly clear that
the Sydney water crisis, which began officially with partial "boil
alerts" on July 27, is not the result of minor glitches but
a systemic failure with far-reaching consequences.
Sydney, a major financial centre in what is known as the developed
world, has joined the ranks of the so-called Third World cities,
from Jakarta to Addis Ababa and Caracas, where it is unsafe to
drink the water.
According to the latest word from Sydney Water--the semi-privatised
corporation entrusted with the responsibility of providing clean
water to Australia's largest city--the 3.5 million residents may
have to wait six months or more before getting the "all-clear".
The entire Warragamba Dam, the city's main water supply, now
appears to be contaminated with the clumps of two potentially
fatal parasites--Giardia and Cryptosporidium. No-one feels safe,
especially parents with young children, elderly people and those
with AIDS and other immune system disorders.
After two earlier official clearances, the city is currently
in its third "boil water" alert after tests showed some
of the highest levels yet of both bugs--up to 347 cysts of Giardia
and 1,050 oocysts of Cryptosporidium per 100 litres. According
to current US health standards, such levels can cause stomach
and diarrheal illnesses. Cryptosporidiosis can be fatal for people
with weak immune systems.
On several occasions, sample readings have been declared clear
of the two microorganisms and then measured at dangerously high
levels within hours. This has given rise to justifiable scepticism
in the ability of the official authorities to tell the truth,
let alone provide clean drinking water.
Similarly, the New South Wales state Labor government constantly
claims that no higher levels of diarrhea or other stomach complaints
have been detected. Some doctors at least are known to have reported
markedly increased cases.
After nearly seven weeks and the launching of two inquiries,
the source of the contamination has not been found. Initial attempts
by the government to blame isolated carcasses of dead dogs or
foxes for polluting uncovered pipelines were soon shown to be
scientifically ludicrous. It became obvious that the contamination
was far wider and occurred after every heavy rainfall in the catchment
area. Now the government of Premier Bob Carr says the causes may
never be known.
But the general causes of the crisis are obvious. In the first
place, they lie in the process of corporatisation and privatisation
implemented by Labor and Liberal Party governments alike in order
to slash spending, lower corporate taxes and hand big business
free access to potential profit bonanzas in the supply of water,
electricity, telecommunications, postal services and so on.
In the early 1990s, the previous Liberal state government increasingly
privatised the Sydney water system, signing contracts for four
private water treatment plants costing $3 billion over 25 years,
rather than spend money to clean up and provide sewerage in the
catchment area and to overhaul an ageing pipeline system.
The contract for the main $200 million plant at Prospect did
not even oblige the company to provide safe water. Nor did it
require Australian Water Services (AWS) to filter for Giardia
and Cryptosporidium, even though the technology was available.
The cost of not doing so had already been witnessed in April 1993
in Milwaukee, where Cryptosporidiosis killed an estimated 100
people and infected 403,000.
Now the contract terms mean that AWS, a partnership between
a global water supply company, the French-based Lyonnaise d'Eaux,
and Australian developer Lend Lease, is likely to escape all legal
liability for Sydney's disaster.
The former Water Board, a public authority, was corporatised
in 1995 by the Liberal government and became Sydney Water, a profit-making
organisation. After the Labor Party came to power in March that
year, it stepped up the demand for cost-cutting and larger dividends,
largely to be achieved by eliminating jobs and cutting maintenance.
This financial year, Sydney Water was expected to provide the
state government with a dividend of $280 million.
Today the estimates for installing effective filtration technology,
whether it be ozonation, ozone disinfection or microfiltration,
range from $100 million to $250 million. So the cost of installing
this technology would be less than one year's dividend.
Meanwhile, Sydney Water has axed at least 4,000 jobs, almost
halving the workforce. As a result, pipes have not been cleaned
and maintenance has suffered. The wildly varying contamination
readings produced in different parts of the metropolitan area
suggest that the pipeline network may be another source of pollution.
Even the number of rangers employed to patrol the hilly catchment
area to watch for pollution sources and intrusions by hunters,
anglers and feral animals has been slashed.
It is in the catchment area that real chaos reigns. In its
outer reaches, water quality is threatened by mining operations,
unsewered residential developments, discharges from town sewage
plants, agricultural, chemical and fertiliser runoff, silt from
forestry operations and land clearing, and livestock allowed to
graze near and roam into streams.
The inner catchments are even worse. Housing and "hobby
farm" developments have been permitted to mushroom with little
regard for the impact on the water supply. In the Shire of Wollondilly,
for example, which surrounds much of Warragamba Dam, the population
has risen from 7,000 to 35,000 in a decade. Fifteen townships
have no sewerage, including The Oaks and Oakdale. Every time it
rains heavily, residents in these villages complain of sewage
rising from septic tanks and overflowing into Werriberri Creek,
which runs into the Warragamba dam.
Questions have been raised about Sydney Water's latest marketing
venture--the sale of human waste sludge. Every day, about 550
tonnes are spread on golf courses, agricultural lands, forests,
public gardens and rehabilitation land throughout the Sydney catchment
area and other catchments across the state. It appears that the
sludge is not baked or pasteurised as required by international
standards to kill off infectious parasites. Yet no tests have
been conducted for Giardia and Cryptosporidium in run-off water.
Testing is too expensive, it is said. As an agricultural chemist
told reporters, "you are looking at around $1,000 per sample
for Giardia tests''.
Finally, what people have long suspected has been proven. Successive
governments have covered up high contamination readings. The Carr
government has produced evidence that the previous Liberal government
did not report high readings in 1993, 1994 and 1995. In Adelaide,
the capital of South Australia, the state Liberal government stands
accused of covering up dangerous levels six weeks ago, just when
the Sydney scandal began.
While politicians from the two traditional ruling parties seek
to use these revelations to engage in cheap point-scoring against
each other, they are all equally responsible. Together, they implement
the requirements of an economic system in which every aspect of
water supply--from the construction and operation of filtration
plants to pipeline maintenance and development permits in catchment
areas--is determined by who can make profits from the process.
The medical knowledge and scientific technology exist to provide
clean, safe water. But instead, the social infrastructure is eroded,
staff are not replaced, ever more reckless entrepreneurs are entrusted
with human health and chaos reigns. Only when the resources, knowledge
and wealth of society are harnessed in the rational planning of
society will the defence of the environment and public health
be assured. As Sydney's pain shows, this is clearly incompatible
with a system driven by the dictates of business.
See Also:
Unemployment set to soar in Australia
A tacit agreement to deny reality
[10 September 1998]
Socialist Equality Party Election Statement:
For a socialist alternative
[5 September 1998]
See the Election Campaign
'98 web site of the Socialist Equality Party
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |