£200 Million Power Scheme Development and Defence (From our special representative.) 10 June 1949 Cairns Post (Qld.) |
Canberra, May 27.—On Wednesday
the Minister for Works and Housing (Mr. Nelson Lemmon) introduced a Bill
setting up a Snowy Mountains Hydro-Electric Authority under the defence
powers of the Commonwealth, and on Thursday he made his second reading
speech on it. Comparable with the great Tennessee
Valley scheme, it is the greatest Public Works undertaking ever entered
upon in Australia. The plan envisages the location underground
of sixteen power stations, scattered miles apart in inaccessible
mountain country, virtually safe from any attack, and the whole scheme,
when completed, is estimated to run into an expenditure of £170,000,000
and £200,000,000. Great
Potential Output "The potential output of this great
scheme, "Mr. Lemmon said," represents in coal 4,000,000 tons a
year, or approximately one third of our present output. This means that if we desired to
produce electricity through steam stations fired by coal it would take 4,000,000
tons of our best black New South Wales coal. If we desired to produce the same amount
of electricity by the use of fuel oil it would take 1,500,000 gallons
of oil a day, or 547,000,000 many thousands of men to mine and
transport the coal required for their operation. In the case of the Snowy Mountains
scheme, with power stations located underground -sixteen of them - the gallons
per year. "This indicates the enormous wealth
which is waiting to be harnessed from the snow-capped mountains of
Kosciusko. It should also indicate, should this nation
be faced with the threat of war, what a great assistance this steady
flowing amount of electrical energy would be to the industrial effort of the
nation. The Government therefore proposes to set
up immediately an Authority under its Defence powers to carry out
this most important national work. "It is found that the requirements
of power for its munition factories and
laboratories, and its defence research installations, even in time
of peace, are now reaching very high figures. In time of war the
power requirements for defence will be so great that they will be in
excess, it is computed, of even the whole of the power that can be
produced by this great scheme. "Furthermore, attention is drawn
to the vulnerable nature of most of our present major power stations,
which, are located—and because of economical reasons must be
located near the coast. They require also the labour of operation
of these stations will require but a handful of men to produce
their full capacity in times of emergency. From the point of view of defence
these matters are of the greatest significance." General
Development Purposes In time of peace, said the Minister,
power not required for defence purposes could be made available
not only to the Australian Capital Territory, but to the power grids of
New South Wales and Victoria for normal industrial purposes. After the water has passed through
the turbines it will flow inland, where the irrigation authorities can
utilise it for the purposes of food production with comparatively small
expenditure, as the whole of the costs of diversion and much of the cost
of regulation will automatically be met by the sale of electricity. This, in itself, will be an enormous
undertaking, for it is estimated that the scheme will make available an
additional 1,800,000 acre feet of water - approximately, three to four
times the amount which is at present used by the Leeton Griffith
irrigation area. Many different proposals have been
considered from time to time, but the scheme as finally recommended to
the meeting of Commonwealth and State Ministers in February of this year
is much more comprehensive than any previously suggested. It involves the use of the waters
of the Tumut and Tooma rivers, as well as the Murrumbidgee, Murray and
Snowy rivers. It envisages the diversion of 235,000
acre feet annually from the Snowy into the Tumut which is a
tributary of the Murrumbidgee, and also the diversion of 334,000 acre
feet a year from the Tooma, a tributary of the Murray, into the
Tumut, thence to the Murrumbidgee. The result of these two diversions
will be that the Murrumbidgee will gain 569,000 acre feet per annum - about
two-thirds of the average annual flow of the Snowy River. To make up for the loss of the
Tooma waters at least one-third of the Snowy will have to be
diverted to the Murray. Further investigation into this aspect
is now being made and a report on it is expected before the end of
June. Commonwealth and State Ministers were
unanimous in agreeing to the proposals advanced for the use of the
two-thirds of the Snowy waters and have agreed to the preliminary
work being put in hand pending a decision as to the final third. If this third is diverted to the
Murray the power output is estimated to amount to 1,720,000 K.W.,
which is nearly as much as all the power stations in Australia can
produce to-day. Comparison
with Tennessee Valley The estimate in regard to the Snowy
had been made on a conservative basis, Mr. Lemmon said, and he had no
doubt that as the scheme progressed by the harnessing of smaller streams
we would have a greater installed output of hydro-electric power than
that of the Tennessee Valley Authority, which amounted to 2,056,000
K.W. The Snowy's
estimated output of K.W. hours is 6,950 millions as against the
Tennessee Valley's of 9,707 millions," he said. I make this explanation because I
have seen some people making a comparison of the two schemes but quoting
K.W. hours of the T.V.A. against installed K.W. power at the Snowy,
as it must be remembered that with a normal load factor of approximately 46
per cent. (which is the load factor estimated
in the Snowy scheme) one K.W. would produce 3942 K.W. hours a year. "Moreover, this great amount of
power can be produced and delivered to the capital cities of Melbourne
and Sydney at about half the cost of production of electricity by steam
stations burning coal or oil. "With adequate and cheap power
and adequate water there is no reason why there should not
develop in the Murrumbidgee and Murray areas great inland cities which
can feed out their secondary production to the coastal capitals of
Australia. If used - and I hope it will be
used - for decentralised industries near the source of supply the cost might
well be little more than one-third of the present cost of power in
our capital cities. "The reason why this scheme is so
highly economical is that large volumes of water are available at such
great heights. One gallon of water a second
dropping 1,000 feet can produce enough, electric power to provide
for the needs of 90 Australians at their present average
consumption. The significance is in the great
height from which the water falls - from the highest power stations
at the 5,000 ft. level down to where it will be finally discharged
to the Murray or the Tumut rivers at only 1,000 feet above sea-level. "Because of our capacity to harness
at such a height, the same water may be used many times. Added to this fact, the snow in
the mountain areas acts as a natural storage space for many months in
the year. This makes it possible for the power to be so cheap and
attractive." Three
Commissioners The Bill provides for the appointment
of a Commissioner and two Associate Commissioners, who will be
charged with the responsibility of carrying out the undertaking. Powers are
given for the Authority to purchase land, plant, materials and
equipment. State and Local Government authorities
will be asked to undertake some of the important aspects of the
construction work, and consideration will be given to inviting
outside contractors from other parts of the world who have skilled
teams for carrying out such work. At the same time a day-labour
organisation will be set up. Jurisdiction is given to the Authority
to transmit electricity generated, but it is anticipated that the
New South Wales, and Victorian Governments will erect and maintain the
necessary trans- mission lines, as in peace-time they will be large
users of the electricity produced and in time of emergency the
whole of the electricity supplies would in any case need to be integrated
through the power grid of the States. |