The Perth Thread - Part 4

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Hope our dams get close to overflowing this winter. The amount of rain coming down is unbelievable.

Feels like it, but overall streamflow isn't much higher until the catchment is well and truly saturated.

These days dams are used more as balancing or storage facilities rather than for collecting streamflow, since most of our drinking water now comes from groundwater and desalination.

Water Corp has pretty good info on their website on the disproportionate relationship between declining rainfall and declining streamflow if you're interested.
 
Feels like it, but overall streamflow isn't much higher until the catchment is well and truly saturated.

These days dams are used more as balancing or storage facilities rather than for collecting streamflow, since most of our drinking water now comes from groundwater and desalination.

Water Corp has pretty good info on their website on the disproportionate relationship between declining rainfall and declining streamflow if you're interested.

Ahh! Beat me to it!
 
The emperor mentioned it on ABC this morning and there's this:

At the risk of bringing politics (again) into this thread, if Federal Labor cannot capitalise at the next election by replaying soundbites of ScoMo supporting Clive Palmer, then they may as well forfeit WA in Federal elections for the next 50 years.

Clive Palmer is persona non grata in WA across the vast majority of the WA political spectrum, I think this thread reflects that too. No one here that is not senile or a troll likes him.
 

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At the risk of bringing politics (again) into this thread, if Federal Labor cannot capitalise at the next election by replaying soundbites of ScoMo supporting Clive Palmer, then they may as well forfeit WA in Federal elections for the next 50 years.

Clive Palmer is persona non grata in WA across the vast majority of the WA political spectrum, I think this thread reflects that too. No one here that is not senile or a troll likes him.
I heard he is the reason our dams are only at 56.4%.
 
It's a shame that public perception of rainfall isn't that we have enough hitting our roofs to support our use over a year, because that's true for almost everyone.

As soon as we appreciate that we don't have a water shortage, we have a collection and storage problem, the better.
 
Working at a servo on Wednesdays must be the cruisiest job in the world. Surely there'd no customers at all until the normal shops shut and stoners start coming in for snacks and meth heads for cigarettes.
 
It's a shame that public perception of rainfall isn't that we have enough hitting our roofs to support our use over a year, because that's true for almost everyone.

As soon as we appreciate that we don't have a water shortage, we have a collection and storage problem, the better.
Absolutely
An average sized roof with average annual rainfall would supply around 60-80% of an average households water use ( not including excessive lawn or reticulation watering .
Councils should be enforcing huge buried or surface water storage tanks which purely collect clean roof runoff whenever a new subdivision is approved.
Couple this with every household having their own plumbed in rainwater tank .
Then capture all the road run off to water parks and gardens .
This simple infrastructure could have been installed 30 years ago when Perth first recognised its water shortage challenges .
Greedy Developers providing the minimum infrastructure for maximum profits won again.
 

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The Perth Thread - Part 4

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