The 'place of take approvals' framework is a new approach to water delivery entitlements in Victorian declared systems. It came into effect on 20 November 2023. The new framework:
Declared systems are the regulated Murray, Goulburn, Campaspe, Loddon, Broken, Bullarook, Ovens, Werribee and Thomson-Macalister systems.
The new approach does not affect anyone’s water shares, it simply clarifies the right (entitlement) to have water delivered.
The changes:
A fact sheet and a set of frequently asked questions are available, which explain the changes and what those changes mean for water users.
Download PDF: Fact Sheet: Place of Take Approvals (November 2023) (331 KB)
Download PDF: FAQs: Place of Take Approvals (November 2023) (260 KB)
As part of commencement of the new framework on 20 November 2023, existing approvals have been converted into place of take approvals in accordance with conversion rules. A copy of the consolidated conversion rules and a fact sheet on what this means for river diverters is available below.
Download Fact Sheet: Converting existing approvals – river diverters (August 2023) (398 KB)
Download Minister's Conversion Rules for Place of Take Approvals (370 KB)
Four short animations are available, outlining what the new framework means for different types of water users.
The Minister for Water has declared rationing areas for all river reaches in declared systems. These areas represent where all water users within the same rationing area will be restricted equally if a river shortfall event occurs.
The areas have been designed to provide flexibility to manage restrictions to respond to different types of shortfalls, so that water users are not restricted for too long or in areas where it’s not necessary.
Download PDF Declaration of rationing areas in declared systems (233 KB)
In the Ovens system and the Murray system downstream of Barmah, a cap on extraction share has been introduced. This means that the issuing of new extraction share is limited and river diverters seeking to increase their extraction share need to do so via trade.
Fact sheets on what this means for river diverters in these areas are below.
Download PDF: Fact Sheet: Extraction share cap and trade in the Murray (November 2023) (298 KB)
Download PDF: Fact Sheet: Extraction share cap and trade in the Ovens (November 2023) (435 KB)
In all water systems there are limits on how much extraction share can be held on land. In un-capped areas, these land-based limits are consistent with how extraction share was issued when water rights were unbundled in 2007 in northern Victoria and 2008 in southern Victoria. In capped areas, these ensure no one holds more extraction share than they reasonably need to manage their delivery risks.
The issuing of place of take approvals and extractions share, as well as cap and trade rules, are governed by rules set by the Minister for Water. A copy of these rules is available below.
In the River Murray downstream of Barmah, there has always been a risk of not being able to deliver all the water that people are entitled to during peak demand periods over summer and autumn. The river is actively managed to avoid restricting water users wherever possible.
However, a shortfall can occur if in the Murray there is either:
More information about Murray delivery risks and shortfalls is available here including:
On this webpage, notional rationing rate under section 3(1) of the Water Act 1989 is referred to as 'extraction share’.
Geothermal Groundwater Licensing Guidelines
The Geothermal Groundwater Licensing Guidelines outline rural water corporations’ powers under the Water Act 1989 to approve section 51 take and use licences for ‘non-consumptive’ purposes and section 76 approvals to dispose water from geothermal uses and confirm that the rural Water Corporations may require reinjection conditions. To do this, the Guidelines provide:
The Guidelines detail the application and risk-based assessment processes for rural water corporations to determine how much groundwater can be taken and how much water will need to be reinjected back into the source aquifer, where reinjection is proposed or required.
The Guidelines also provide a risk-based approach to “nett permitted extraction volume”’ licensing. The nett permitted extraction volume is the gross permitted extraction volume of water authorised to be taken and used under a section 51 licence minus the volume of water required to be reinjected back into the source aquifer and for which an approval under section 76 is required.
Where an application for a licence is made under section 51 and a PCV applies, the rural water corporation must ensure that the “nett permitted extraction volume” is not exceeded so that the objective of setting a PCV is achieved.
The Guidelines can be downloaded here:
The Guidelines should be read in conjunction with the:
For further information please contact your rural water corporation or ground.water@delwp.vic.gov.au.
There are three main instruments of appointment for managing systems in Victoria specified under the Water Act 1989: storage manager, resource manager and seasonal determination appointments.
The Minister for Water has appointed storage managers under section 122ZK of the Water Act 1989 for large, regulated water systems which supply multiple bulk/environmental entitlement holders.
The functions of storage managers are specified in section 122ZL of the Water Act 1989. Obligations (which specify what storage managers are required to do) are conferred on storage managers by the relevant bulk/environmental entitlements in the water system. Obligations may differ between water supply systems to allow for the flexibility required in managing different systems.
Generally, storage managers manage and control water resources in water systems. General responsibilities include:
In some non-declared systems, where there is no section 64GA (seasonal determination) appointment, storage managers make seasonal allocations to entitlement holders.
Coliban Water
Storage Manager - CW - Coliban 2005(PDF - 122 Kb)Grampians Wimmera Mallee Water
Storage Manager - GWMW for the Willaura Headworks System (PDF - 286 Kb)Goulburn Murray Water
Resource Manager & Storage Operator - GMW - Broken 2004(PDF - 55 Kb)Melbourne Water
Storage Manager - MW for the Melbourne Headworks System (PDF - 3.6MB)
The Minister for Water has appointed resource managers under section 43A(1)(b) of the Water Act 1989. The Water Act 1989 does not specify any functions for resource managers, so this role is defined by the obligations conferred on resource managers by the bulk entitlements relevant to the appointment.
The Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning is currently reviewing all resource manager appointments to see if they are still required or are redundant.
As part of the review, several resource manager appointments have been found to be redundant (contain no active obligations) and lapsed on 31 January 2022. These include Southern Rural Water’s resource manager appointment, Grampians Wimmera Mallee Water’s resource manager appointment and Goulburn-Murray Water’s resource manager appointments for the Kiewa, Loddon and Goulburn basins. Melbourne Water’s appointment for the Melbourne Headworks System Bulk Entitlements and Desalinated Water Bulk Entitlements is also redundant and was revoked on 9 September 2022.
Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning
Resource Manager - DSE - Moorabool Barwon & Otway Basins 1997 (PDF - 221 Kb)Goulburn Murray Water
Resource Manager - GMW for the River Murray Bulk Entitlements (PDF - 258 Kb)The Water Act 1989 allows the Minister for Water to appoint an authority to be responsible for making seasonal determinations in respect of declared water systems under section 64GA. The appointed water corporation is required to determine and publicly announce the water that is available in that system for each entitlement type.
Goulburn-Murray Water’s appointment includes the Broken, Bullarook, Goulburn, Loddon, Campaspe, Murray and Ovens declared water systems.
Appointment GMW Seasonal determinations(PDF - 116 Kb)Southern Rural Water’s appointment includes the Thomson/Macalister and Werribee declared water systems.
Appointment SRW Seasonal determinations(PDF - 120 Kb)Notes and disclaimers
The Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning does not warrant the data is current nor does it warrant that the data or the data capturing processes are free from corruption or error. If there are issues with this report, please click here to let us know.
Notes and disclaimers
This report summarises the water available in a system and how it is split between private water holders, the environment and water corporations. Note that this data includes all allocation accounts with regulated trading zone sources within the selected water system (including water shares and bulk entitlements).
In the table:
If there are issues with this report please click here to let us know.
An allocation account records allocations made to your water share throughout the year. It keeps track of any water you hold that is available to use or trade.
Your allocation account is maintained securely on the Water Register. Along with allocations made to your water entitlements, it records all your use, trade and carryover.
The account is sometimes called an ABA, which is shorthand for ‘allocation bank account’. However the word ‘bank’ isn’t used widely anymore as it was confused with financial banks.
All your water shares must be linked to an allocation account to record the allocation available to you.
Allocation accounts can also be linked to one or more water-use licences or water-use registrations so that the water can be used on land.
You can have more than one water share linked to the same allocation account, but each water share must have the same trading zone as the account.
From 1 July 2014 allocation account holders do not change if a water share is linked to the account or removed from it.
This means you can link your water share to an allocation account that you do not hold and where your name is not on the account. This is legally called a standing direction where future allocations made to the water share go to the account holder.
Until 30 June 2014 the holders of an allocation account were usually the owners of the water shares linked to the account. If no water shares were linked to the account, the account holders were the owners of any water-use licences or registrations linked to the account. These account holders could change when a water entitlement was linked or removed from the account.
When you have allocation in your account you can either
The trading zone of your allocation account decides where you can buy and sell allocation.
If carryover is allowed in your water system, you can carry over your unused allocation depending on the water entitlements linked to your account.
You can use the carryover calculator online to understand how carryover rules work for your account and the water entitlements linked to it.
You can get online access to your allocation accounts on the Victorian Water Register website. Find out more here.
Here you can quickly and easily:
There is now faster and cheaper and automated approval of allocation trades submitted online to the Water Register’s secure website. Water users and brokers can submit applications online using My water. Most trades can be approved immediately and you can get water into your allocation accounts more quickly.
An annual statement is sent to the allocation account holders around July each year.
It gives you a summary of the allocations, water use, trade and carryover linked to the allocation account over the previous water year.
Guides to reading your allocation account statement are available below.
Note that these statements are only available for allocation accounts for water entitlements in declared water systems.
This fact sheet explains how carryover and spillable water work on the Murray, Goulburn and Campaspe systems.
Download PDF Fact Sheet 1: How carryover works on the Murray, Goulburn & Campaspe
The spill rule for carryover on the Murray system is changing for season 2013-14.
Download PDF Fact sheet 2: New spill rule on the Murray
A limit on carryover will apply so that entitlement holders cannot carry over more than their full water share volume.
Download PDF Fact sheet 3: Limiting carryover to your water share volume
Murray, Goulburn and Campaspe water entitlement holders can elect not to carry over some or all of their unused allocation into 2013-14 and future seasons by returning it to the pool of water for new allocations.
Download PDF Fact sheet 4: Electing to not carry over your unused allocation
Water users will always be charged when they carry over and store more water than their entitlement in the dams.
Download PDF Fact sheet 5: Charges for storing more than your entitlement
This fact sheet explains what a low-risk-of-spill declaration means for your spillable water.
Download PDF Fact sheet 6: Why you can’t use your spillable water
New controls on allocation trade to the Victorian Murray and between states are being implemented to avoid sudden trade suspensions.
Download PDF Fact sheet 7: New controls on allocation trade
From next season less water will be set aside in early reserves to reflect the delivery efficiencies achieved through the Goulburn-Murray Water Connections Project.
Download PDF Fact sheet 8: An early reserve to suit the modernised Goulburn system
New arrangements for the Murray reserve policy are being brought in for season 2013.
Download PDF Fact sheet 9: An early reserve for the Murray system
Spillable water is any carryover or allocations above your water share volume.
A spillable water account is a feature of your allocation account (ABA) linked to your water share.
As part of your allocation account recorded on the Victorian Water Register, it keeps track of any water that can be lost if the dam spills.
Once your full water share volume is reached, any further allocation increases are recorded in your allocation account, but this water is set aside as spillable.
You cannot use or trade any water in your spillable account until after the Resource Manager makes a low-risk-of-spill declaration.
Spillable water accounts allow you to use extra dam space when it's not needed to support other entitlements.
When the dams are full, spillable water has to make way for inflows to support new allocations to all water shares.
To make sure that it is always possible to keep track of the water that needs to spill when inflows come into the dam, you cannot use or trade your spillable water.
Keeping track of the water that needs to spill while allowing use would require daily metering of all entitlement holders' water use.
This would also have to be recorded daily in the Victorian Water Register so that any spilled water was shared fairly among entitlement holders' accounts.
The technology to support this is not currently available for all entitlement holders.
Having to own water share volume to secure access reinforces the importance and value of these entitlements.
When water users carry over water it is kept in the dams for the new season.
When new inflows come in, this extra water kept in storage has to make way when the dam space is needed.
New inflows are what supports allocations to everyone's water shares. If new inflows spill because of water that has been carried over, then allocations are affected.
The Dartmouth spill rule has not worked well in the recent wetter years.
Water carried over has contributed to spills of new inflows from Hume Dam, and this has affected allocations.
The new Hume-based spill rule will protect new allocations to existing water shares.
Victoria has a half share of the capacity of Lake Hume and Lake Dartmouth. New South Wales controls the other half of these dams.
Victoria can store its share of inflows in Victoria's half of these storages.
Water is released first from Hume Dam to meet Victoria's commitments through the season.
Water is released from Dartmouth when it's needed to supplement supplies from Hume. Generally, Dartmouth is used as a reserve storage that supports supplies in dry years.
So while the level of Hume can rise and fall greatly each year, Dartmouth can stay full for many years until it's drawn down in dry years. Dartmouth can take several years to recover after it is drawn down, as we saw recently.
This document shows modelled monthly storage levels and spills from Victoria's shares of Hume and Dartmouth over the last 23 years, with discussion of how the new Hume-based spill rule would have worked through that period.
Download PDF Hume and Dartmouth behaviour 1989 to 2012 (PDF - 60 Kb)
Further explanation of the new controls on allocation trade, including a number of questions and answers is available in the document below
Download PDF Victoria refines controls on allocation trade between valleys (PDF - 92 Kb)
You can track the trade opportunities available from this website here.
Select your trading zones to see any limits that currently apply on trade in from other zones.
More detail on how these limits are determined can be found under the heading Click here for the data that leads to the limits above.
If you plan to buy a Murray, Goulburn or Campaspe water share or enter into a limited term transfer of a water share it is important to factor in how the carryover recorded against it can affect:
The document below provides information for water share buyers to consider.
Any volume of carryover recorded against a water share in the current season is displayed on the Copy of Record you can download from the Victorian Water Register website..
The Copy of Record also displays the amount of water stored above the volume of that water share. This amount may incur above entitlement storage fees.
Above entitlement storage fees are charged to the owner of a water share.
Unlike the fixed entitlement storage fees, these charges may not be raised until late in the season. So, if this water share is transferred, then the buyer may be responsible for paying these charges later in the current season.
It is important to know that if you buy a water share before the above entitlement storage fees are raised, you will be liable for any above entitlement storage charges issued later in the year for that water share.
Charges apply for each megalitre of carryover or allocation stored above your water share volume.
There is no charge for any water lost from a spillable water account if a dam spills.
The charges for each basin are available in the pricing plans of the rural water corporations Goulburn-Murray Water and Lower Murray Water.
Buyers also need to know if further allocation increases made to the water share will go directly into the available balance of the allocation account, or will be quarantined in the spillable water account until a low-risk-of-spill declaration is made.
The new limits on trade from the Goulburn, Campaspe and Loddon are now in effect.
The limits on trade into the Victorian Murray from NSW come into effect on 10 January 2013.
You will be able to apply to relinquish unused allocation from April 2013.
The new limit on how much can be carried over will apply on the Goulburn and Campaspe systems to any unused in your account on 30 June 2013 at the end of this season.
On the Murray, this limit will now come into effect for any unused in your account on 30 June 2014, following the recent announcement by the Minister.
All other changes will come into effect from 1 July 2013, including
The document below summarises when each of the changes from the carryover review come into effect.
Download PDF When the changes from the carryover review come into effect (PDF - 59 Kb)
Carryover, like water trading, provides entitlement holders with more opportunities to manage their own water water availability.
People will use carryover and trade differently to best meet the needs of their enterprise.
The paper below discusses some of the factors to consider in making carryover decisions. It uses some simple case studies to illustrate some of the financial costs and benefits of decisions to carry over or trade unused allocation in different scenarios.
Download PDF Understanding the trade-offs associated with carryover decisions (PDF - 307 Kb)
Discover how carryover works and how you can use it in your farm business.
A presentation to irrigators in northern Victoria by Joe Banks from DEPI's Water and Natural Resources explains the carryover rule changes of 2012 and shows how you can use the carryover calculator to work through your own scenarios.
Goulburn system dairy farmers Craig Lister and Don Stewart and Steve and Margot Henty on the Murray system talk about how they plan and manage carryover through drought and wetter years.
An overview of the main changes announced in 2012 from the review of carryover rules for the Murray, Goulburn & Campaspe systems.
How carryover rules work in the Murray, Goulburn & Campaspe systems, and how you can use the carryover calculator on the Victorian Water Register website to test your own scenarios and plan your water for next season.
A more detailed explanation of the Murray spill rule for carryover in the Victorian Murray from 1 July 2013.
Explaining the cap on carryover which started on the Goulburn and Campaspe systems in 2013, and comes in on the Murray system from 30 June 2014.
More about other changes - including allowing entitlement holders to relinquish unused allocation and new limits on trade between valleys.
Changes to the early reserve policy on the Goulburn and Murray systems announced in 2012.
Craig Lister, Don Stewart and Steve and Margot Henty describe their farm businesses and water entitlements.
How the farmers have used carryover since the drought and through wetter years.
Using carryover as insurance against dry conditions, late allocations or a dry start to the season in August. Risks of losing carryover when the dam spills and the need to understand the Hume-based spill rule on the Murray system.
Considering the Resource Manager's seasonal outlook, autumn conditions and prospects for spring watering, assets and resources, dam levels, feed costs and commodity prices.
Having a carryover plan and owning enough water share and a share of dam space.
The comfort of having water delivered early in the season so that water can be used most efficiently in spring to grow feed and get water onto the farm.
These videos are provided with support and funding from the Victorian Government through Linking Farms and Catchments to Modernisation and Growing Food and Fibre initiatives. These videos have been delivered primarily through partnerships between the Department of Environment and Primary Industries, Water Corporations, Catchment Management Authorities and other bodies, and include additional footage provided by Goulburn-Murray Water.
The Carryover Calculator is designed to help you understand how carryover rules currently work in northern Victoria and the Werribee system.
It allows you to explore how carryover and allocations affect the amount of water available under your entitlements in different scenarios.
Click below to launch the carryover calculator.
We recommend you use a modern web-browser like Firefox, Chrome or Safari to get the best experience of the calculator.
A user guide for the calculator is available below.
The document below includes announcements made by the Resource Manager in recent seasons. It can be used to help you explore scenarios in the calculator.
More information on the carryover rules is available here.
Disclaimer: The calculator will provide an accurate representation of the available water in each scenario, given the data you enter. However, you should not assume that results from the calculator actually represent how much water is currently in your allocation account. Any decisions to use or trade water from your account should be based on the volume currently in your account, which is available from your water corporation’s ordering system.
A water user in Victoria may hold one of the following entitlements, licences or approvals, depending on the circumstances:
Records of these special entities are kept in the Victorian Water Register in some cases – please check with your water corporation for more information:
Before using a bore to dispose of matter underground, approval from the managing water corporation is required, along with a licence to operate works.
Underground disposal is used to dispose of drainage water, concentrate resulting from desalination and other waste, and also increasingly in Managed Aquifer Recharge projects, where water is injected into an aquifer for storage and future use.
Approval is made by the water corporations under section 76 of the Water Act 1989, according to the Policies for managing section 76 approvals. Groundwater desalination (with disposal of concentrate underground) and Managed Aquifer Recharge schemes are regulated by amendments to the Policies for managing take-and-use licences.
Records of approvals for underground disposal are stored in the Victorian Water Register, along with related works licences.
A copy of the policies and amendments for managing take and use licences, including Managed Aquifer Recharge, are available here.
Download PDF Policies for Managing Section 76 Approval (5,463 Kb)
Download PDF Amendment (Groundwater Desalination) of Policies for Managing Section 76 Approvals (1,223 Kb)
Amendments (Geothermal Reinjection Schemes) to the Policies for Managing Section 76 Approvals (141 kb)
Download PDF Managed Aquifer Recharge Technical Advisory Notes to Delegates_2010-09-21 (158 Kb)
Download PDF Technical Advisory Notes: Groundwater Desalination (with Underground Disposal) (471 Kb)
A take and use licence is a fixed term entitlement to take and use water from a waterway, catchment dam, spring, soak or aquifer. Each licence is subject to conditions set by the Minister and specified on the licence.
A registration licence is an ongoing entitlement to take and use water from a catchment dam, spring or soak. Registration licences were issued between 1 July 2002 and 30 June 2003 based on historical use of water.
The Water Register reports on how many take and use licences and registration there are in a water system here and on take and use licence trading prices and statistics.
Take and use licences are issued and managed according to policies as detailed in the document below (revised and approved February 2014).
Download PDF Policies for Managing Take and Use Licences - 2 February 2014 (2300 Kb)
Amendments (Geothermal Reinjection Schemes) of Policies for Managing Take and Use Licences (101 Kb)
The issue and trade of groundwater licences is also subject to guidelines as detailed in the document below (revised and approved April 2015).
Take and use licences are issued and managed according to caps on the resource, known as permissible consumptive volumes. The Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning has released guidelines on how to determine resource share such as caps in groundwater and unregulated systems as detailed in the document below (approved October 2015).
Download PDF Resource sharing guidance - groundwater and unregulated systems (4564Kb)
Copy of record
You can download a Copy of Record for an existing take and use licence or registration licence here.
You will need to enter the take and use (or registration) licence identification number and pay the relevant $15.90 fee.
Please be aware that a works licence, private right or another take and use licence may be linked to this licence. If so, it will be listed in the "Related Instruments" section on your copy of record. You will need to purchase a separate copy of record for it if you wish to view its details.
Most take and use licences are now stored in the Victorian Water Register. However, older licences that have not been recently renewed or otherwise transacted on may still be kept in a local water corporation system, so the copy of record is not yet available here.
A sample copy of record is available below.
Your entitlement and the conditions set out on your licence are included on your copy of record. If you are not sure about your conditions and obligations please contact your water corporation. Offences include
Penalties may apply and may increase for repeated offences.
A works licence is a licence to construct, operate, alter, decommission or remove works associated with the extraction of water (i.e. bores, pumps and dams). Each licence is subject to conditions set by the Minister and specified on the licence.
Works licences are issued and managed by water corporations in accordance with policy. The latest changes to the policies clarify dam safety requirements for private dams and emphasise dam owner responsibility for managing dam safety.
The document Your dam:Your responsibility is a handy guide to managing the safety of small dams and recommended for all dam owners.
Download PDF Policies for Managing Works Licences (470 Kb)
Amendments (Geothermal Reinjection Schemes) to Policies for Managing Works Licences (154 Kb)
Note that bores that are (or are proposed to be) less than 3.0 metres in depth do not require a works licence.
Download PDF Shallow Bore Exemption (26 Kb)
An operating licence is not required for certain types of works used for domestic and stock water.
Download PDF Operating licence exemption(40 Kb)
Copy of record
You can download a Copy of Record for an existing works licence here.
You will need to enter the works licence identification number and pay the relevant $15.90 fee.
Please be aware that a take and use licence, private right or registration licence may be linked to this licence. If so, it will be listed in the "Related Instruments" section on your copy of record. You will need to purchase a separate copy of record for it if you wish to view its details.
Most works licences are now stored in the Victorian Water Register. However, older licences that have not been recently renewed or otherwise transacted on may still be kept in a local water corporation system, so the copy of record will not yet be available here.
A sample copy of record is available below.
A delivery share is an entitlement to have water delivered to land in an irrigation area.
It gives you access to a share of the available capacity in the channel or piped network that supplies water to your property.
It provides the security of having water delivered when there is demand for water from other landholders on the channel or network.
A delivery share is tied to the land and stays with the property if it is bought or sold.
If you sell your property the delivery share automatically transfers to the new owner.
Delivery share does not go when the water share is sold. The water share goes to the new owner on its own and the delivery share stays with the property.
A delivery share can be divided across a number of different outlets.
A delivery share is defined by a rate of megalitres (ML) per day.This rate sets out how deliveries will be shared if everyone on the channel or piped network wants water on the same day.
When there are more customer orders than the system can deliver, the delivery share rate is used to decide how deliveries are rationed.
Water corporations charge different fees for this entitlement. This is the main way the costs of operating and maintaining the channels, pipes and automated gates are shared.
In some cases these fees are significant and can be the main item on your water corporation bill.
It is best to check with your water corporation about your delivery share fees.
You can increase your delivery share by transferring from another property in the same irrigation district. If there is spare capacity in the irrigation district you can apply to your water corporation to increase your delivery share, or issue you with delivery share if you are a new customer.
You can decrease your delivery share by transferring to another property in the same irrigation district or terminating all or part of your share and paying the termination fee.
This fee is equal to 10 times the annual infrastructure access fee, and can be significant.
Delivery shares are managed by water corporations in accordance with the Directions on Delivery Entitlements issue by the Minister for Water. Note that clause 13(3)(b) of the directions have been superseded in the Murray-Darling Basin by the Commonwealth's "Water Charge (Termination Fees) Rules", which require that a termination fee be no more than 10 times the annual access fee.
Download PDF Directions on Delivery Entitlements (413 Kb)
You can download a copy of record to get the full details of any delivery share from the Water Register here.
You will need to enter the delivery share identification number and pay the relevant $15.90 fee.
Details on a copy of record include the delivery share’s total rate in ML per day and the rate for each outlet, the delivery system, the annual delivery allowance, owner and land description.
A sample copy of record is available below.
A water-use licence is an entitlement to irrigate a specific parcel or parcels of land. The licence sets out the conditions for use, such as how much water you can use on your land in a single irrigation season.
You need a water-use licence if you’re supplied with water for irrigation from the regulated Murray, Goulburn, Broken, Loddon, Campaspe, Bullarook, Werribee or Macalister systems.
The licence is tied to the land. If you sell your property the water-use licence automatically transfers to the new owner, unless part of the property is sold separately.
A water-use registration authorises the use of water apart from irrigation, like stock and domestic or some industrial uses.
The holder of a water-use licence is always the owner of the land described in the licence.
When the land is sold the water-use licence stays with the land and goes to the new owner.
If land covered by a single water-use licence is subdivided, it is necessary to have a separate water-use licence for each separate piece of land.
Conditions recorded on each water-use licence are specific to local areas and so they vary across Victoria, however there are a number of standard conditions including an annual use limit to ensure irrigation is carried out in accordance with water-use objectives.
An annual use limit is a condition on every water-use licence which defines:
Download PDF Standard water-use conditions (689 Kb)
Download PDF Water-use objectives (105 Kb)
Minimise Salinity Impacts from Irrigation in High Salinity Impact Zones
If you are not sure about your licence conditions please contact your water corporation. Offences include
Penalties may apply and may increase for repeated offences.
If you want to increase the annual use limit on water-use licence, you need to apply to the water corporation to assess whether it can approve the change.
You will need to demonstrate that the proposed increase in irrigation will not cause harmful effects like waterlogging, salinity and nutrient impacts.
In some parts of north-west Victoria where salinity is a serious problem, there is a limit on the total annual use volume.
This means you may have to buy annual use limit from another water-use licence holder in your region to increase your limit.
You don’t generally pay annual fees for your water-use licence, unless you are in a designated salinity impact zone.
In certain circumstances you may need to pay a small fee every year for each megalitre of annual use limit created since 1993 in a salinity impact zone.
Also if you want to apply for a new water-use licence or vary your existing licence, your water corporation may charge fees.
Water-use licences in specific areas of the Victorian Mallee are designated as being located in a salinity impact zone and are managed under the Ministerial Determination on Salinity Impact Charges. A map of the zones as well as details about the salinity impact charges are available below.
Salinity Impact Zones and Salinity Impact Charges
Navigate to Salinity Impact Zone Maps
You can download a copy of record to get the full details of any water-use licence from the Water Register here.
You will need to enter the water-use licence identification number and pay the relevant $15.90 fee.
Details on a copy of record include the description of the land on which the water can be used, the owner, the conditions of use, the annual use limit, the water share holding limit and the trading zone for water use.
A sample copy of record is available below.
A water share is an ongoing entitlement to a share of the water available in your water system. It gives you a right to a share of water in the dams.
Features of a water share include
The volume of a water share is defined as the maximum amount of allocation that can be made against it each year.
The water that is actually in the dam in any given year is allocated against water shares.
The seasonal allocation is the percentage of your water share volume available under current resource conditions, as determined by the resource manager.
Your water share is linked to an allocation account (ABA) which keeps track of allocations available to your water share and any water that you use or trade.
For example, in a dry year a 50% allocation to your 100 ML water share gives you 50 ML of water available to use or trade. A 100% allocation means that you have your full water share volume available.
The resource manager announces allocations regularly through the irrigation season.
Water shares can be high or low-reliability.
Allocations are made to high-reliability water shares before low-reliability shares.
If carryover is allowed in your water system, it’s your water share that provides a right to a share of space in the dams and the right to carry over your unused allocation.
You can find out about the carryover rules that apply in each system here.
You can buy and sell a water share separately from land. Your water share does not have to stay with the property if you sell the land.
You don’t have to own land to hold a water share.
If you want to use water on land you need to have a water-use licence. You also need a delivery share to have water delivered to your land if you are in an irrigation district.
Your water share is a separate asset that can be mortgaged, just like your land.
There is a fixed annual charge to cover the costs of operating and maintaining the dams in your water system.
This charge is called an entitlement storage fee or water share fee and is based on the volume of your water share.
Storage charges for each water system are available in the pricing plans of Goulburn-Murray Water , Lower Murray Water or Southern Rural Water.
Entitlement holders may also pay above entitlement storage fees in northern Victoria, where carryover rules allow them to store allocation above their water share volume.
You can download a copy of record to get the full details of any water share from the Water Register here.
You will need to enter the water share identification number and pay the relevant $15.90 fee.
Details on a copy of record include the water share’s volume, water system source, reliability, owners, trading zone, delivery system and any allocation or carryover against the water share.
A sample copy of record is available below.
Download PDF Sample water share copy of record (PDF - 78 Kb)
The copy of record also includes a description of any linked land and any recorded interests like a mortgage or limited term transfer.
The Water Register reports on how many water shares there are in a water system here and on prices paid for water share trade.
Bulk entitlements and environment entitlements are legal rights to water granted by the Minister for Water under the Water Act 1989. They provide the right to take or store a volume of water subject to a range of conditions. Bulk entitlements are held by specified authorities, such as water corporations, while environmental entitlements are held by the Victorian Environmental Water Holder.
You can find out more about bulk entitlements and environmental entitlements on the Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action website.
Notes and disclaimers
The Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning does not warrant the data is current nor does it warrant that the data or the data capturing processes are free from corruption or error. If there are issues with this report, please click here to let us know.
The Commonwealth Environmental Water Holder also has rights to a share of Victoria's water resources for environmental purposes. These are in the form of water shares, licences or contractual supply agreements. More details about water entitlements for the environment can be found here:
Introductory information about carryover resources. Introductory information about carryover resources. Introductory information about carryover resources. Introductory information about carryover resources. Introductory information about carryover resources. Introductory information about carryover resources.
Numerous resources are available to help you understand carryover and to answer any queries you may have.
The Carryover calculator is a tool designed to help you understand how carryover rules currently work in northern Victoria.
A review of the carryover rules that apply on the Murray, Goulburn and Campaspe systems was conducted during 2012.
The outcomes of the review were announced by the Minister for Water in late 2012, including a number of changes to the rules. You can find a summary of the results of the review and when the changes come into effect below, along with a copy of the Minister's media release.
More information on each of the changes is available on the carryover fact sheets page.
The Carryover Review Committee brought together water users and water corporations from across northern Victoria to look at how the reforms to the carryover provisions introduced in the Murray, Goulburn and Campaspe in 2010 were working.
Information about the Committee and a copy of the complete final report of the Carryover Review Committee provided to the Minister for Water is available below.
The document below provides a timeline of the changes to the carryover rules since carryover was first introduced in 2007, and a summary of the processes involved in developing changes to the carryover rules.
Additional documents on the history of carryover reform are available here.