
In this edition: Fuel Concerns | Emerging Supply Issues for Plastic Pipes | Environment Forum 2026 Presentations | Disinfection by-products: A fresh look at an old problem | Nature-Based Solutions Bus Tour and Networking Drinks | Fire Ant Zoning Changes | AWA QLD Events | Drinking Water Regulation Workshop | WIOA QLD Conference | New IChEMS scheduling decisions for PFAS
There's distinct concern from the urban water sector about whether the Federal Government fully understands the real time effect on the ground of the current fuel supply issues, particularly in our regional and remote areas. Often operating out of sight, the urban water sector can be (and has been) overlooked in times of crisis. However, it is primary to community safety and the effective and efficient operation of Australian businesses.
Fuel rationing in Australia is regulated at both the federal and state levels, primarily designed for severe, national liquid fuel emergencies. The core legislation governing this is the Liquid Fuel Emergency Act 1984 (Cth), which empowers the federal Minister for Energy to implement a national system of rationing to manage fuel shortages.
Queensland’s urban water sector provides a critical service that underpins public health, environmental protection, and the functioning of our communities and economy. Diesel in particular, also provides back-up power for essential water services and given that we are still in the high-risk weather season, keeping back-up generators fully fuelled is a priority. The sector also requires continuous deliveries of water treatment chemicals.
As such, qldwater has written to the relevant Ministers calling for:
We have become aware that water utilities and councils may face emerging supply chain pressures for plastic pipes used in water mains, particularly PVC and polyethylene (PE/HDPE). The following has been assembled from sources provided to us by sector pipe suppliers.
Reportedly, recent supplier notices indicate significant price increases for plastic pipes taking effect from mid-April 2026, alongside reduced quote validity and potential surcharges.
Reported increases are substantial, with PVC products rising by around 27% and polyethylene by up to 36–40%. These changes are being driven by global factors rather than local demand, including disruptions to petrochemical supply chains, rising oil and feedstock costs, and freight volatility. Australia’s reliance on imported plastic resins amplifies exposure to these pressures.
For the urban water sector, the immediate risk is not widespread product shortages, but rapid cost escalation and procurement uncertainty. Utilities may experience budget impacts for capital works, reduced certainty in supplier quotes, and potential delays for large or non-standard pipe orders.
We encourage our members to engage with suppliers, confirm pricing conditions, and consider forward procurement for committed projects. This is a developing situation and should be monitored, particularly for polyethylene products, which appear most exposed to current market volatility.
Presentations and photos from the Environment Forum: Offsets and Outcomes – Delivering Environmental Value Through Water Services, held at Redlands IndigiScapes Centre, Capalaba on 26 February 2026, are now available on the qldwater website.
The Forum brought together practitioners, researchers and policy leaders to explore how water services can deliver stronger environmental outcomes through integrated, outcome focused approaches, highlighting offsets, credits, nature based solutions and emerging markets.
Safe drinking water depends on effective disinfection, yet disinfectants such as chlorine can react with naturally occurring compounds in water to form disinfection by-products (DBPs), some of which are toxic.
Join us at 10am on Thursday, 16 April for a webinar exploring a research program being led by Professor Fred Leusch on whether common DBP mitigation strategies may unintentionally increase toxicity. By combining advanced chemical analysis with innovative bioassay testing, the project evaluates both DBP formation and their overall toxic effects. Working with Australian water utilities, the research identifies treatment approaches that minimise DBP toxicity while maintaining effective pathogen control. The outcomes will provide practical guidance to help utilities optimise treatment processes and support the continued delivery of safe drinking water to communities.
Stormwater Queensland and the Queensland Water Directorate will be hosting a Nature-Based Solutions Bus Tour on Thursday 7 May 2026.
The tour will include site visits to the two most iconic offsets-related nature-based solutions projects completed in Queensland in 2026 including:
Presentations will include discussions about community engagement, design, approvals, construction, operation, establishment, maintenance and monitoring.
These projects have direct relevance to stormwater and wastewater practitioners alike with directly transferrable approaches adopted by these projects to both water streams. They exemplify the practical application of Total Water Cycle Management principles and while they may be a first of their kind nationally, the lessons to be shared can be applied broadly to many different types of projects.
Places are strictly limited and expected to fill quickly.
Fire ant biosecurity zones are in place across Queensland to prevent the spread of fire ants and to protect unaffected areas. There are 2 fire ant biosecurity zones. New suburbs may be added to the zones each month, while others may change zones.
Queensland’s fire ant biosecurity zones are reviewed and updated monthly to align with the Interstate Plant Quarantine (IPQ) zones. The changes will reflect the latest fire ant detections and will help reduce the risk of human-assisted spread of fire ants.
The shift from regular reviews of the fire ant biosecurity zones to monthly aligns with the Fire Ant Response Plan 2023–2027. These changes will:
The Australian Water Association has a few upcoming events worth noting:
Join the Australian Water Association QLD Branch at Boundary Hotel, West End for the Queensland Sundowner. Catch up with water sector colleagues over drinks, light bites and good conversation in a relaxed setting.
QLD Regional Tech Event – 21 July
Hosted by Gympie Regional Council, this event will feature a morning of technical presentations, and a panel Q&A followed by a local site tour.
Queensland Conference 2026 – 13 to 14 October
Under the theme “One Water, One Future: Uniting Queensland’s Water Story,” the 2026 Queensland Conference brings together utilities, government, Traditional Owners and industry to share ideas, strengthen partnerships and shape a resilient, sustainable water future.
The Water Supply Regulation team is conducting a Drinking Water Regulation workshop in Cairns on Tuesday 21 April 2026.
The agenda includes presentations by Water Supply Regulation on a range of topics including commissioning of new infrastructure, water quality results and incident reporting. Queensland Health and service providers will also deliver presentations about operational challengers and relevant current issues.
Companies servicing the Australian water industry operations sector are invited to partner with WIOA for the 2026 Queensland Water Industry Operations Conference & Exhibition on the Gold Coast and/or their associated events.
The Water Industry Operations Association [WIOA] offer a range of sponsorship opportunities designed for organisations looking to align their brand with their mission of supporting industry development and strengthening the connection between professionals in the field.
This is more than a branding exercise; it is an invitation to work together with WIOA in delivering an excellent experience for the operators and leaders who gather at these annual Queensland events.
By securing a premium exhibitor site or a tailored sponsorship package, your organisation will join WIOA in directly supporting the frontline of the water operations industry.
Explore the Partnership opportunities and book early to ensure you maximise your visibility across the sector: Sponsorship - WIOA
DCCEEW has a just opened a consultation on a raft of IChEMS scheduling decision for PFAS chemicals. It appears that this has been prompted by the recommendations from the PFAS Senate Select Committee report, published last November.
The scheduling decisions up for consultation are as follows:

The proposed scheduling decisions apply a tiered risk management framework across the PFAS classes instead of a blanket Schedule 7 listing, which provides a prohibition on imports and use. Schedule 4 and 5 chemicals are subject to managed phase-down through transition requirements, use restrictions, and waste controls that are not as strong.
PFOS, PFOA and PFHxS were listed on Schedule 7 in July 2025, with bans on imports of chemicals and articles containing the listed chemicals, and restrictions on “unintentional contamination” of up to 25 µg/kg (25 ppb). The Schedule 7 listing of PFNS, PFDS and PFHpS proposes similar restrictions.
A handful of other chemicals of concern have also been listed.
The consultation will be open until 24 April. qldwater will be making a submission.
If you want to find out more, please visit the consultation page.