Verterra Projects
Discover our on-ground expertise in project design and delivery.
Beneficial Use of Mine Water for Irrigated Tropical Pasture Cropping
As part of expansion planning, it became apparent to this mining operation that excavation would intercept paleo-channels containing significant volumes of groundwater in the Macarthur River District. The water, which was contaminated with elevated zinc levels exceeding ANZECC discharge guidelines. Verterra was briefed to help resolve these issues with a cost-effective approach that would ensure a long-term, beneficial solution.
Turning Risk into Resource: Land and Irrigation Planning for Coal Seam Gas Water Use
To enable sustainable, large-scale irrigation using coal seam gas (CSG) water, this client required both rigorous technical assessment of candidate land and a well-prepared regulatory submission for a beneficial use approval. The project had to address marginal soils in a region with limited experience in intensive irrigation, while aligning with environmental safeguards and regulatory expectations.
Coal Seam Gas Water Reuse through Irrigation Feasibility and Design
With planning underway for the staged development of up to 15 coal seam gas (CSG) wells in two Extended Production Test areas, the client sought an economically and environmentally sustainable option to manage the production of up to 1.8ML of highly saline and sodic CSG water per day.
Rather than investing in expensive reverse osmosis or disposal pathways, a beneficial reuse option involving agricultural irrigation trials was proposed. To ensure success, the proposal required in-depth feasibility, design, and regulatory compliance support to assess viability and satisfy a Water Management Strategy and Environmental Authority conditions.
From Effluent to Asset: Supporting Agricultural Reuse through the Wamuran Irrigation Scheme
With the population of the Caboolture River catchment expected to increase by over 100,000 people in the next 20–25 years, Unitywater faced a growing challenge: how to sustainably manage the effluent produced by the South Caboolture Sewage Treatment Plant (STP). Although effluent is A-grade and suitable for a range of non-potable uses, without intervention, the increased nutrient loading could threaten the health of the Caboolture River and downstream waterways.
To address this, Unitywater launched the Wamuran Irrigation Scheme (WIS)—a circular economy initiative to beneficially reuse treated effluent in agriculture. Verterra was appointed to provide deep expertise in agronomy, irrigation, land capability, and environmental planning to help guide the project’s success.
From Waste to Water: Making Leachate Work for the Land
In regions of Australia where rainfall is unreliable, treated wastewater (effluent) is increasingly recognised as a valuable resource—particularly for irrigating tree crops and other vegetation. However, to safely and effectively reuse effluent for irrigation, its quality must be carefully monitored and managed. This case study demonstrates how Verterra approached successfully undertook risk assessment and development of a management plan that would enable its beneficial reuse for a forest plantation.
Beneficial Re-use of Biosolids
Verterra is providing an ongoing operational service for managing beneficial reuse of 37,000t/year of biosolids, including transport logistics, crop nutrition, data management and regulatory compliance.
Australia’s First Beneficial Reuse of Coal Seam Gas Water
Verterra designed, undertook feasibility studies, assisted with regulatory approvals, developed a stakeholder engagement plan and project managed delivery of 1,250ha of irrigated native eucalypt forest at Fairview and Springwater near Injune on behalf of Santos.
Lama Lama Land Trust Forest Management Evaluation
Yintjingga Aboriginal Corporation (Lama Lama Land Trust) completed the first stage of a timber harvesting contract with Cape York Timbers in 2016. Verterra undertook a desktop review followed by a field inspection and evaluation of harvesting undertaken in 2016/17.