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Drought stimulus package includes SA desalination plant plan

The government's drought support package is being met with mixed reactions.

The government's drought support package is being met with mixed reactions. Photo: ABC

Murray River water destined for Adelaide will be reallocated to farmers upstream so they can grow feed for their livestock, as part of a federal drought stimulus package announced in Canberra today.

The Government has struck a deal worth almost $100 million so that the South Australian Government can turn on its desalination plant to service Adelaide, leaving 100 gigalitres to be used to grow fodder upstream.

Drought Minister David Littleproud said it was a “unique deal” that would provide up to 6,000 farmers with access to 25 megalitres each, which must be used to grow feed for livestock.

The water will be offered to irrigators at $100 per megalitre and delivered by April 31.

“This is one step towards making sure that we think outside the square, bringing new water into the [Murray-Darling] Basin, to make sure that we use it wisely, to ensure that all our breeding herd is protected,” Mr Littleproud said.

The Government has also announced $15 million in education support for drought-affected communities.

This includes $10 million to be provided through the Education Department’s Special Circumstances Program and $5 million for childcare centres in drought-affected areas.

The ABC yesterday revealed the drought package would contain funding for local councils, road building and cheap loans with two years interest free for farmers and agriculture dependent businesses.

Mr Littleproud defended the extension of the loan scheme, saying it would not give debt-stricken farmers false hope.

“There’s a viability test, simply you have to be able to prove in a normal year, when it rains, and under normal circumstances, you can repay that debt under your business model,” he said.

“We’re not going to put people in debt who can’t afford it.”

He also said the Government was prepared to take further action if the drought did not break.

“If it doesn’t rain, we’re going to do more,” he said.

“We’ve got a track record, we’ve done umpteen drought tours with going back from prime minister [Malcolm] Turnbull right through to Prime Minister [Scott] Morrison and myself.

“I mean every time we’ve gone out and we’ve listened, we’ve acted and if it doesn’t rain, we’ll act again.”

The Government has also released drought coordinator Major General Stephen Day’s final report, having faced months of pressure to make the report public.

It has accepted 14 of 18 recommendations from the report.

Mr Morrison’s Government had kept Major General Day’s report confidential, despite Labor attempts to make it, and former drought envoy Barnaby Joyce’s reports, public.

Mr Joyce has said his reports, sent via text message, were for the Prime Minister to release.

-ABC

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