This is the second post on the subject of the Draft Surat
Underground Water Impact Report now out for review after the Queensland Water
Commission today took its finding to Roma yesterday and Chinchilla today. See
yesterday’s post on the background to the report and the geological formations
involved.
This post looks at how the model was derived and examines the monitoring
regime put in place by the QWC. There
were three key steps in designing the flow model: conceptualisation, construction
and calibration. In the
conceptualisation phase, the designers took into account geological data and
formation contacts in databases held by the Geological Survey of Queensland and
the Department of Natural Resources Groundwater Database.
They also took into account the distribution and depth of
the geological layers of the Walloon Coal Measures based on previous studies
and developed hydraulic parameter estimates based on pump and drill tests,
existing models and reported results.
They devised 19 model layers based the formations from
the shallowest (Condamine Alluvium) to the deepest (Permian Sediments) and
mapped out the groundwater flow between the layers. The layers are recharged by
rain in the outcrop areas on the edges of the Basin. The model is further
complicated by the Walloon Coal Measures (the main CSG bearing formation in the
Surat Basin) which itself contains various layers of sediment of varying
permeability. The model allocates three layers to the Walloon for simplicity.
The model covers an area 550km x 660km each divided into a
1.5sq km cell stacked into 19 layers. Once
constructed with initial hydraulic parameters, the model was calibrated to replicate
pre-CSG conditions in 1995. It was
calibrated using groundwater levels from 1,500 bores in the groundwater database. The model was designed to make predictions
from the 1995 data both including and excluding petroleum impacts. They added uncertainty analysis to provide
200 different predictions of drawdown for each model cell at different time
periods. The upper and low five percent of the 200 were discarded as outliers
and the maximum value of the remaining predictions was used in the report.
The report estimates the CSG industry will draw an average
of 95,000 megalitres of water a year over the life of the industry. It will be higher in the next three years as
the industry expands with the QWC with an average of 125,000 ML a year over the
period. This is why getting the water monitoring
strategy right is so important.
The water monitoring strategy involves monitoring of water
levels in coal seams and surrounding aquifers. It will not monitor water
quality (eg for contamination from fracking) or the volume of water extracted
from wells. QWC will not conduct the monitoring – that will be left to the gas
companies. Someone said to me today that was like leaving Ned Kelly in charge
of the bank vault but the QWC assures us the companies have legal
responsibilities and any anomalies will quickly be exposed.
The monitoring has six broad objectives. 1. Establish
background trends not attributable to CSG. 2.Identify changes in
aquifer conditions in petroleum development areas. 3. Identify
changes in aquifer conditions near critical groundwater use (eg towns that rely
on groundwater), 4 Identify changes in aquifer conditions near springs. 5. Improve
future groundwater flow monitoring 6. Improve understanding of connectivity
between aquifers.
There will be a regional monitoring network which will have
142 monitoring sites across the region (27 already exist) which will have 498
monitoring points (104 already exist). These sites will target different strata
of the Surat and Bowen Basin including the Condamine Alluvium, Main Range
Volcanics, Mooga Sandstone, Orallo Formation, Gubberamunda Sandstone,
Westbourne Formation, Springbok Sandstone, Walloon Coal Measures, Hutton
Sandstone, Evergreen Formation, Precipice Sandstone, Clematis Sandstone and
Bandanna Formation.
At each site, water data is collected at least once a
fortnight. Queensland’s regulatory requirements
provide for the UWIR to be updated every three years but there will also be an
annual report.
2 comments:
So, if "It will not monitor water quality (eg for contamination from fracking)", who WILL monitor water quality?
Nice post. It seems quiet helpful model. To covering an area 550km x 660km each divided into a 1.5sq km is not an easy job to do where as the cells stacked into 19 layers. Good work, Keep it up.
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