Background
When bushfires threaten a region, landholders need fast and easy access to water to wet down buildings and surrounding areas and suppress the fire front to save the lives of people and animals and prevent asset damage.
We have listened to the community and taken action to make sensible changes to water regulations. Landholders can now access water to prepare for and respond to emergency fire situations without a water access licence and certain approvals. This change eliminates previous barriers and provides faster and more cost-effective solutions for fire preparedness and fire fighting.
What are the new rules?
The exemptions cover specific uses of water:
- to prepare for and fight fires to protect life and property, and
- to take and store water (e.g. in a tank or dam) for future fire fighting needs. Water taken and stored is subject to a 100,000-litre limit per fiscal year.
The exemptions also support fire preparedness activities such as training and controlled burning (by or under the authority of a fire fighting authority), maintenance of fire fighting equipment, and wetting down buildings and land surrounding buildings whenever a fire is threatening a property.
Frequently asked questions
The new rules are summarised in the following FAQs.
What is water for fire preparedness and fire fighting?
When fire threatens life and property, landholders need fast and easy access to water.
New amendments to the Water Management (General) Regulation 2018 provide exemptions that allow landholders to take water for specific fire-related purposes without the need to hold a licence or certain approvals. The changes make it easier and cheaper for landholders to access water to prepare for and respond to emergency fire situations.
Water is a vital resource for the people of NSW, supporting communities, Aboriginal culture, industries such as agriculture and fisheries, recreation and the environment. Our limited water resources are shared for the benefit of present and future generations. It is the responsibility of all water uses to ensure sustainable and efficient use of water and to not take more than needed.
Why have the changes been implemented?
Landholders needing to take water to prepare for or fight active fires were previously required to hold a water access licence and water use approval, unless using water under a harvestable right or collected from a roof using a rainwater tank. They also needed to obtain a water supply work approval for any pump, bore or other work used to extract the water. This placed an unreasonable time and cost burden on people trying to protect life and property.
The changes make it easier and cheaper for landholders to access water to prepare for and respond to emergency fire situations.
What changes have been made?
The exemptions allow landholders to take and use water without a water access licence or water use approval for the following purposes:
- to fight an active fire on a landholding
- to prepare for a nearby fire that is threatening a landholding
- for fire fighting training (by or under the supervision of a fire fighting authority)
- for controlled burning (by or under the supervision of a fire fighting authority)
- for the testing and maintenance of fire fighting equipment.
Water supply work approvals are also no longer needed for mobile pumps/tanks to take water for the above purposes.
'Landholders’ includes owners and occupiers of land.
When can water be used under the exemptions?
If there is a fire on a landholding or on nearby land and it is posing a threat, the owner or occupier of the land can take water and use it to:
- control, suppress or extinguish the fire
- protect people, animals or property (such as buildings and machinery) from the fire.
A ‘fire’ includes all types of fire emergencies, such as bushfires, grassfires, shrubland fires, electrical fires, house fires and fires on industrial premises.
A fire becomes a threat to a landholding if the flames, heat, smoke and/or embers are likely to harm people, animals or property.
A landholder cannot start taking water under the exemptions for other reasons, such as:
- because a total fire ban has been declared
- a high official fire danger rating has been communicated – such as “Extreme” or above
- a fire is present but is well away from the landholding and not posing any real threat to the that person’s landholding
- to regularly irrigate grassed or lawn areas around buildings to reduce future fire risks.
Important: An active fire must be present before these exemptions can be used, except when carrying out fire fighting training or testing and maintaining firefighting equipment.
Where can the water be taken from?
Water can be taken from the following water source types:
- a surface water source located on the person’s landholding – such as a creek, stream or river running through the landholding
- a surface water source abutting a landholding – such as a river on the boundary of a landholding, dissecting it from a neighbouring property
- a groundwater source (water in an aquifer) found under the surface of the person’s landholding.
The exemptions do not allow a landholder to take water from any other water source or to enter a landholding they do not own or occupy.
Where can the water be used?
Water taken under the exemptions can be used on the person’s landholding and on neighbouring land abutting the landholding and used for fire preparedness and fire fighting. It cannot be conveyed to or used on other lands.
What volume of water can be taken?
The volume of water taken must be reasonably proportionate to the fire that is being fought or the threat being posed by an approaching fire.
For example, the exemptions do not allow a landholder to take:
- 1 megalitre of water to extinguish a small grass fire
- any water if the fire is far away from the landholding and posing no real threat to people, animals or assets on the landholding
- water every week to test and maintain fire fighting equipment.
A volume limit applies to landholders who want to take water under the exemptions for storage in a tank or dam for later use – see question below relating to storage.
What fire preparation activities are included?
Activities to prepare for a fire that is threatening a landholding include:
- wetting down assets – including domestic houses and outbuildings (such as machinery, hay storage and animal housing sheds), community halls or buildings, and community gathering spaces (such as culturally significant sites with no infrastructure)
- wetting down land directly surrounding assets to reduce the risk of those assets catching fire, but not to a level that is disproportionate to the threat.
The action of wetting down can include the use of fire fighting equipment, such as pumps, hoses, reticulation systems and roof sprinklers, or blocking downpipes to flood gutters.
If no fire is present, the take and use of water under the exemptions are limited to:
- fire fighting training (by or under the supervision of a fire fighting authority)
- controlled burning (by or under the supervision of a fire fighting authority)
- testing and maintaining fire fighting equipment, and
- increasing the amount of water stored in a tank or dam for future fire fighting needs, noting a volume limit applies in this case.
Can water be taken and stored for later fire fighting use?
Water can be taken from a water source and stored in a tank or dam for later use to fight or prepare a landholding for a future possible fire. The tank or dam does not have to be used solely for this purpose and may hold water from other sources.
However, if a landholder takes water under the exemptions to store it, a 100,000 litre (that is 0.1 megalitres) per landholding per fiscal year limit applies to that take and storage and the take overall must be reasonably proportionate. For example, a landholder cannot keep accruing multiple hundreds of thousands of litres in storage over multiple years if no fires have eventuated.
What uses of water are NOT permitted by the exemptions?
A landholder cannot use water taken under the exemptions for:
- domestic or stock purposes, as this is provided for under basic landholder rights
- commercial purposes, including agricultural (such as irrigating crops and pasture horticulture, operating feedlots and so on) and industrial uses, as this is provided for under the water access licence system
- a secondary purpose, such as supplying it to another person or any other use from which a commercial benefit is or may be obtained. Water taken and used for another purpose is subject to the standard licensing and approval requirements, or
- refilling a dam when water has been taken from it by a fire fighting agency during a bushfire.
Further, the exemptions do not cover someone who intentionally starts or is associated with starting a fire with the aim of taking water under the exemptions for other uses. It is an offence under the Crimes Act 1900 to intentionally cause a fire and to be reckless as to the spread of the fire to vegetation on any public land or another person’s land.
Is a water supply work approval required?
Mobile water tanks and pumps (such as temporary fire fighting pumps and vehicle or trailer mounted fire fighting units) are exempt from water supply work approval requirements when used solely for fire preparedness and fire fighting.
A water supply work approval is required for any new dam or bore constructed at a fixed location. This ensures that the impacts of new permanent works on other water users and the environment can be assessed.
However, if the new work is a spearpoint or bore solely to provide water for fire preparedness and fire fighting, a streamlined impact assessment process will apply and the application fee will be the same as a basic landholder right bore application. If a new work is to be used for multiple purposes, such as irrigation, then the standard water supply work approval application process and fees apply.
Does the exemption affect harvestable rights?
No. Harvestable rights relate to the portion of rainfall runoff that can be captured and stored on a property in a dam, without a licence or approval. Harvestable rights water can already be lawfully used for fire preparedness and fire fighting.
Does the take need to be metered?
Landholders are encouraged to record the volume of water taken under the exemption for their own records but are not required to submit any reports.
Mandatory metering requirements do not apply to water supply works that are used to take water under a licence exemption and not nominated on a water access licence.
Does the exemption cover the replacement of water taken from farm dams by emergency service agencies during a bushfire?
No. Recompense for water taken from private property by emergency service agencies to fight bushfires (burning on the landholder’s property or elsewhere) is a matter separately considered by the NSW Rural Fire Service and the NSW Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development.
Affected landowners are advised to contact the NSW Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development or Local Lands Services in their region for further advice.
How are the exemptions being monitored and evaluated?
The department will undertake targeted periodic surveys of landholders to identify the extent and scale of water used for fire fighting and fire preparedness. This will help us understand how the exemptions are being used and inform a medium-term (3-5 year) review. The review will look into whether the exemptions should be maintained, modified or transition to a new form of basic landholder right. Any expansion of basic landholder rights to include fire preparedness and fire fighting would require an amendment to the Water Management Act 2000.
How are the rules relating to water take and use being enforced?
The Natural Resources Access Regulator (NRAR) monitors and enforces water use activities. The NRAR uses numerous tools including reports about suspected non-compliance and intelligence from remote surveillance techniques and technology (such as aerial photography and satellite imagery analysis) to identify non-compliant water take. NRAR can investigate potential non-compliance with the exemptions and may take enforcement action as required. For further information, see the NRAR website.
How the rules were reviewed?
The department reviewed the rules applying to water take for these purposes through 2023 and 2024.
The process involved significant public and key stakeholder consultation, the details of which can be viewed in the published what we heard report.
It included an information session held in the 2024 April Roundup.
Supporting documents
Find supporting documents below: