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Nowingi, Victoria

Coordinates: 34°36′S 142°14′E / 34.600°S 142.233°E / -34.600; 142.233
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Nowingi is a locality in Victoria, Australia, approximately 50 kilometres (31 mi) south of Mildura. It is in the local government area of the Rural City of Mildura. Nowingi is at an elevation of 48.8 m above sea level. The nearest town to Nowingi is Red Cliffs, about 32 km away.[1]

History

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Salt pan, Nowingi, 2021

Nowingi was where the Millewa South railway line branched off from the Mildura line. The branch line was designed to open up the area for wheat farming but was never completed, and was only used to transported gypsum, mined from adjacent salt pans.[2] The line was closed and dismantled in 1988.[3]

Nowingi State Forest holds the only known Victorian population of the nationally threatened South-eastern Long-eared Bat.[4]

In May 2004, unreserved Crown land, roughly five kilometres south of Nowingi, was declared the Government's preferred site for the state's hazardous industrial waste, involving a long-term waste containment facility.[5] The plan was cancelled however, after local protesters marched to Parliament House forcing the Government to look elsewhere.[6] The Minister for Planning's Assessment and Panel Inquiry report found the proposal environmentally feasible but recommended against it based on strategic planning issues.[5]

The site is a small enclave of state forest surrounded by national park, and contains habitat important to a number of threatened species.

Its hydrological composition was disputed, the Environmental Effects Statement (EES) investigations and subsequent evidence predicted that contaminated moisture would take greater than 1000 years to move though the LTCF barrier system. Transport modelling of groundwater contaminants predicted that if contaminants did enter the groundwater, they would move slowly through the Blanchetown Clay and then in a westerly to north-westerly direction towards the Raak Plains, taking thousands of years to finally discharge within the Raak Boinkas in the Murray-Sunset National Park, while local opponents claimed it would flow east through Hattah-Kulkyne National Park into the Murray River.

The site was going to be around 500 km away from Melbourne, where most of the waste was generated. Local opponents to the LTCF argued that transporting the waste would have incurred higher costs and create more opportunity for accident than a LTCF closer to Melbourne.

Local opponents, a group called "Save the Food Bowl Alliance" and local media branded the LTCF the "Mallee Toxic Waste Dump". The chairman of the "Save the Food Bowl Alliance", National Party member Peter Crisp, was elected to Victorian Parliament in 2006, after campaigning on the issue.

In January 2007, the Victorian Government announced that it was abandoning its proposal to build the Long Term Containment Facility at Nowingi.

The Panel Inquiry report found the proposal to be environmentally feasible but recommended against granting approval on strategic planning grounds. Specifically because it:

  • Could fill too soon to provide a sustainable solution for Victoria's Category B wastes;
  • Cannot be reasonably or readily expanded because of its surrounds;
  • Would be between two National Parks;
  • Would be located in high conservation value remnant vegetation which is habitat of threatened species;
  • Would be too distant from waste producers; and
  • Would be as a lesser but relevant consideration, constrained by the need to suspend construction during the breeding period of mallee emu-wren and malleefowl.

The abandoning of the LTCF proposal was received with jubilation by opponents of the LTCF not only in the Mildura area and elsewhere in Victoria, but also across the border in South Australia where there were fears that in reputation, if not in substance, the toxic waste could affect the water supply via the Murray River and thereby the fruit-growing industries of the Riverland and Murraylands.

The Mildura Rural City Council and residents spent almost $2 million fighting the Government's proposal for the LTCF at Nowingi. On 10 January 2007 the Victorian Government did not rule out some form of reimbursement for the Rural City of Mildura council's legal and other costs in opposing the LTCF. "The general rule is that people bear their own costs, that is most likely to apply in this case ... but I've indicated and I am prepared to talk to the council and mayor about the whole issue of how Mildura moves forward and I'll do that," John Thwaites said.[7][dead link]

References

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  1. ^ "Frequently asked questions about Nowingi in Victoria - Bonzle Digital Atlas of Australia". maps.bonzle.com. Retrieved 9 October 2024.
  2. ^ Dadswell, Harley (January 1962). "Line to Nowhere" (PDF). Victorian Railways Newsletter. The Victorian Railways Commissioners: 10–11. Retrieved 26 December 2024.
  3. ^ "Millewa South Line". vicsig.net. Retrieved 26 December 2024.
  4. ^ "Bats in the Mallee". Mallee Conservation. Retrieved 9 October 2024.
  5. ^ a b "Nowingi Long Term Containment Facility for Industrial Wastes". Retrieved 25 November 2009.
  6. ^ Orietta Guerrera (10 January 2007). "Fraught quest fails to find the right site". The Age. Melbourne. Retrieved 25 November 2009.
  7. ^ "City seeks compo for dump fight". News Limited. 10 January 2007. Archived from the original on 12 June 2021. Retrieved 10 January 2007.

34°36′S 142°14′E / 34.600°S 142.233°E / -34.600; 142.233