We are continuing environmental investigations around Merimbula Bay to help our project team develop options for the deep ocean outfall and Sewage Treatment Plant upgrade. This will make our iconic beaches and lakes cleaner and improve public health.
In October, we completed heritage investigations at the Sewage Treatment Plant to search the area for heritage items, including items of Aboriginal significance. In November, we carried out geotechnical investigations around the exfiltration ponds at the Sewage Treatment Plant. The results will be correlated with available historical information to help us understand ground conditions to inform infrastructure design.
In May, we carried out our second dye dispersion test. These tests help us to understand how waterborne materials travel and spread in the bay’s currents. This important information will feed into a model we will use to develop options for the deep ocean outfall.
Working with the Community
Our Community Working Group has been meeting regularly since the beginning of the year. They are working collaboratively to select the location of the deep ocean outfall. We will be meeting before the end of the year to give them an update on what our investigations have found.
We’ll be back out in the community in early 2019 to provide you with a project update. We look forward to seeing you then!
Originally the outfall extended out into the ocean and beyond the waves, but it was destroyed by a large storm in the 1970s. Since then, the beach-face outfall has been discharging effluent at the centre of Merimbula Beach. The effluent flows across the beach and into the ocean waters of Merimbula Bay.
Effluent (treated sewage) is either reused or disposed of. Council reuses as much effluent as possible for irrigation at Pambula Merimbula Golf Course and farmland at Oaklands. The remaining effluent is disposed using either the dunal exfiltration ponds or the beach-face outfall.
The beach-face outfall has caused community concern around its impact on the aquatic environment and public health. In 2009, the EPA required Council to start investigating better disposal options. After investigating a wide range of options, Council assessed the options with a community focus group made up of state government, interest groups and local community members.
In 2013, the group and Council agreed a deep ocean outfall is the preferred effluent disposal option. Compared to other options the deep ocean outfall has:
Link to information about the discounted options: Fact Sheets 1 - 16 Merimbula Effluent Options Investigation (BVSC & AECOM 2013)
As a result, the EPA amended Council's operating licence for the STP to include a requirement to construct a deep-ocean outfall and upgrades to the STP.
First, the Community Working Group must help the project team assess options for upgrading the STP and select an alignment for the deep ocean outfall. After that, the project team will be able to design this infrastructure and prepare an environmental impact statement (EIS). This design and EIS will be subject to statutory and regulatory approval which we hope to have by 2019. Once we have approval, we will be able to seek funding for detailed design and construction.
This project will be assessed as State Significant Infrastructure (SSI) and will meet the Secretary’s Environmental Assessment Requirements (SEARs).