Gippsland › Latest news › South Gippsland Water
Decommissioning old assets along Newry pipeline to conclude by December 2023
The Newry pipeline, carrying over 1,000 megalitres of irrigation water, is operational. Decommissioning old assets, including channels, siphons, and bridges, is in progress, set to conclude by mid-December.
The Newry pipeline is fully operational, with over 1,000 megalitres of irrigation water ordered and carried by the new pipeline. The focus now is the decommissioning of old irrigation assets. Assets within the construction corridor have already been decommissioned and Southern Rural Water's construction partner, Jaydo, is turning its attention to legacy assets on customer properties.
The Newry pipeline, transporting 1,000+ megalitres, operates. Decommissioning old assets like channels, syphons, and bridges continues, with funding from various sources
Newry decommissioning works
In the weeks ahead, decommissioning work will include the removal and disposal of:
- 2,271 lineal metres of concrete channel
- 1,149 lineal metres of syphon
- 279 lineal metres of road crossing
- 175 detheridge wheels (and their concrete outlets)
- 131 regulators
- 85 culverts
- 32 bridges
Decommissioning is expected to be finished by mid-December. The Newry pipeline project replaced open channels with 17.25 kilometres of new pipeline, and the construction of four kilometres of customer connection pipelines and 51 customer outlets.
Water efficiency benefits
Southern Rural Water Program Lead, Matt Weatherall, said the project is delivering long-lasting and tangible benefits to farmers, waterways and the environment. "By transitioning to a piped supply, less water is lost to leakage and evaporation and there are opportunities to implement best-practice water use, invest in on-farm efficiencies and improve farm productivity," he said.
The Newry Pipeline project has been delivered under Phase 2 of the Macalister Irrigation District 2030 project. Modernisation in the Macalister Irrigation District has supported water savings, consistent and higher flow rates with new outlets, and supported environmental outcomes with reduced outfall into drains, meaning fewer nutrients entering waterways and the Gippsland Lakes.
The modernisation of the Macalister Irrigation District is jointly funded by Southern Rural Water, the Commonwealth Government through the National Water Grid Fund and the Victorian Government.
Pictures from Southern Rural Water YouTube channel.
Source: http://gippsland.com/
Published by: news@gippsland.com

Community feedback strengthens Wellington's Road Management Plan, highlighting priorities for road upgrades

East Gippsland kids invited to join and send entries for National Water Week poster competition by 12 September 2025

Future Wellington Community feedback shapes draft plans, final input invited before 16 July 2025

Gippsland Water commits to keeping customer bills affordable despite cost of living pressures

Have your say on Latrobe's draft Domestic Animal Management Plan 2026 - 2029 until 29 July 2025

Latrobe City Council endorses new Council Plan and Community Vision 2025-2029 to guide Latrobe's future growth

Wellington Shire Councillors advocate for region's needs at National Local Government Assembly in Canberra on 24 - 27 June 2025

East Gippsland tourism and hospitality masterclass to build sustainable, resilient businesses and grow positive

Southern Rural Water celebrates 30 years of service with modernisation, partnerships and sustainable water
