Abstract

ABSTRACT As urban populations expand globally, the associated increase in urban land cover directly impacts the social and environmental amenity of natural assets, including waterways. The primary driver of urban waterway degradation changes in land uses which results in altered hydrology – from stormwater runoff, and where present, wastewater treatment plant discharge. Whilst the impacts of pollutants are relatively well regulated via public policy, a gap remains for the management of flow regime modification. The Urban Streamflow Impact Assessment (USIA) was developed to fill this management and planning knowledge gap. The approach begins with the identification of waterway values (social, ecological and geomorphic) then explicitly links these values to streamflow characteristics using hydraulic and hydrologic metrics. USIA was applied to a case study in Western Sydney and demonstrated the loss of values associated with ‘business-as-usual’ approaches to stormwater and wastewater management. Conventional stormwater management approaches do not remove enough excess flow to meet reasonable outcomes for the waterway. This excess runoff is increasingly seen as a resource and opportunity for improving water security and liveability. USIA is consistent with regulatory frameworks and can be applied across developing and established urban catchments to provide explicit input to planning controls. The approach is appropriate at multiple scales, informing urban planning from a broad strategic level through to detailed design. By linking social and ecological values with geomorphic and flow requirements, the approach enables an understanding of which management approaches could allow desirable waterway outcomes to be met.

Highlights

  • Urban development is placing growing pressure on waterways in Australia and around the world

  • This study provides an initial proof of concept for the development and application of the Urban Streamflow Impact Assessment (USIA)

  • USIA is intended for application wherever increased streamflow associated with urban development threatens the values of receiving streams, including streams in greenfield development areas, or periurban and urban areas where housing density is increasing through infill development

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Urban development is placing growing pressure on waterways in Australia and around the world. USIA was developed to assess the impacts of altered streamflow on social, ecological and geomorphic values of streams in urban catchments (Figure 2). Stage 3: a workshop leading to sub catchment specific social, ecological and geomorphic values and flow metrics, resulting in a compliance and risk assessment evaluating loss of waterway values against increased streamflow resulting from development scenarios. The process of identifying stream values links ecological, social and geomorphic features to environmental factors that may influence the long-term viability of the identified value, if catchment conditions change. These links provide a critical link to planning instruments, regulation and legislation

Stage 1: establish context and identify values
Stage 2: detailed assessment of study reach
Stage 3: assess streamflow impacts on values
A SYDNEY CASE STUDY
KEY FINDINGS AND OPPORTUNITIES
INTEGRATION INTO THE REGULATORY CONTEXT
Findings
CONCLUSIONS
Full Text
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