The Nabiac aquifer water supply can provide an extra 6 - 10 million litres of water per day to the Manning scheme.
Water is drawn from an inland dune aquifer between Nabiac and Tuncurry and treated at the Nabiac Water Treatment Plant. It is then pumped to the Darawank reservoir and distributed to homes and businesses in the Great Lakes. The system can also supply water to properties in the Manning area during a drought.
The system opened in early 2019 and played a critical role in our response to the record drought we faced later that year. Projects are currently underway to upgrade the water treatment plant and expand the borefield. This will provide further drought security for the region.
The aquifer can hold around 200 million litres of water. It is recharged by a combination of direct rainfall and stormwater runoff from nearby Bundacree Creek. The land on which the aquifer is located is culturally significant to the local Aboriginal people. A historic land partnership deal ensures members of the Forster Local Aboriginal Land Council maintain perpetual right of cultural access to the site.
More information
Wondering what an aquifer is? Check out our An Aquifer Explained poster(PDF, 2MB) or this fun video we made with Whizzy.
You can also download and print our poster series on the construction and operation of the Nabiac aquifer water supply scheme here:
Poster 1 - Financing and construction(PDF, 7MB)
Poster 2 - Objectives and background(PDF, 1MB)
Poster 3 - Protecting the aquifer(PDF, 5MB)
Poster 4 - The water treatment process(PDF, 355KB)
Poster 5 - Images of the water treatment plant(PDF, 4MB)
Poster 6 - Distribution - from plant to the customer(PDF, 4MB)