The Independent Pricing and Regulatory Tribunal of NSW (IPART) is reviewing prices Water NSW can charge for operating and maintaining the Murray River to Broken Hill pipeline from 1 July 2022.
On 10 March 2020, IPART received an update from Water NSW to its pricing proposal. The update was in relation to using disaggregated asset lives for capital expenditure.
The Draft Determination is the legal instrument for our draft decisions on the review of prices for connecting, or upgrading a connection, to water supply, sewerage, or drainage system for metropolitan water agencies.
IPART seeks feedback and submissions from the public on prices that WAMC can charge its customers for providing water management services to apply from 1 July 2021. Submissions are due by 16 October 2020.
Presentation slides for the online public hearing on Tuesday 5 April 2022 for our review of the maximum prices that the Central Coast Council as a Water Supply Authority can charge for its water, wastewater and other related services from 1 July 2
The Draft Determination is a draft legal instrument for the maximum prices that Essential Energy can charge for water and sewerage services from 1 July 2019. We seek feedback on our Draft Determination from stakeholders by 24 April 2019.
We have set prices for Essential Energy’s water and sewerage services in and around Broken Hill, and for WaterNSW’s Murray River to Broken Hill Pipeline, from 1 July 2019. Our Reports for both reviews are available on our website.
IPART has released its draft report on the maximum prices that Hunter Water can charge its customers from 1 July 2020. We seek submissions from the public and other stakeholders by 9 April 2020 on our draft decisions
IPART has started our review of the maximum prices that Hunter Water can charge its customers from 1 July 2016. We seek submissions from the public and other stakeholders by 5 October 2015 on key issues that are relevant to the review.
On 10 March 2020, IPART received an update from Water NSW to its pricing proposal. The update was in relation to the method it uses to allocate corporate capital expenditure across its business segments.
This is the legal instrument that would give effect to the decisions made in our Final Report. It outlines the maximum prices that WAMC can charge its water users.