Dam safety management for sustainable farming businesses and catchments

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Pisaniello, John D.
Burritt, Roger L.
Tingey-Holyoak, Joanne

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In most countries, owner responsibility exists under Common Law to manage and maintain dams according to current standards. However, farm dam safety in Australia is being flouted and the sustainability of farming businesses compromised because of the potential and severe consequences of dam failure. This paper explores management and policy issues associated with safety of farm dam water storage through a comparison of developments in two Australian states against international benchmarks. Historical review and a longitudinal study over a 12-year period provides the basis for case analysis and demonstrates the application of the benchmarked model policy selection guidelines. Research results show South Australia is lagging international best practice in a number of ways whilst Tasmania provides leadership. The contribution of this paper is a regulatory mix analysis approach, incorporating a cost-effective spillway safety engineering/accounting tool, developed and demonstrated through Australian case studies, that can be applied by any jurisdiction wanting to check and/or improve its farm dam safety management and provide a clearer analysis of the social and environmental costs and threats associated with on-farm dam safety issues.

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Agricultural Water Management

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