
Photo: ANH
The attack and monopoly of natural resources.
SYDNEY’S WATER HEALTH
Sydney’s drinking water is unlikely to remain healthy over the coming decade, according to a report handed to the New South Wales government.
Undertaken by Eco Logical Australia and Restore Environmental Consultants for the Water Minister, Rose Jackson, the audit looked at the health of the city’s water catchment between 2019 and 2022.
After a three-year audit, the scathing assessment of the city’s water supply found seven of the 18 key indicators for the water system’s health were worsening.
The audit also found there posed a risk to the city’s main water catchment providing adequate, good quality water to the greater Sydney area in the future.

The catchment, which takes in several major river systems including the Hawkesbury-Nepean, covers more than 160,000 sq kms and collects and stores drinking water for Sydney and the surrounding regions.
The report concluded two of three indicators of water quality – raw water quality and nutrient concentrations – were worsening in many waterways.

The audit found the catchment’s macroinvertebrate communities were in decline due in part to habitat degradation and deteriorating wetlands.
Auditors found ash and debris from the 2019 bushfires had affected water quality and the ecology of many parts of the landscape, an event that burned about a third of the catchment area.
The periods of heavy rain that followed the fires assisted vegetation recovery, but also triggered soil erosion and landslips, the report says.
What are the odds that these suspicious events have hit Sydney’s water catchment area hard..
But here’s the thing:
Instead of addressing the real causes at the heart of this short supply, the report blames good old ‘climate change’ for the damage.
It found climate change was the “greatest driver of the overall health of the catchment”.
Yes, forget cloud seeding and directed energy weapon evidence.. it was climate change!
“Further decline is likely due to climate change and increasing bushfires, especially in wetlands already under stress from impacts such as longwall mining or urban development,” the audit found.
“Climate change will threaten the resilience or capacity of the catchment to maintain essential ecosystem services such as the provision of adequate, good quality source water.”
The audit recommended the NSW government review its ‘climate change mitigation policies’ and said more data collection was needed, as modelling indicates extreme weather will become more frequent.
As we know, there are many questions surrounding these so-called ‘natural disasters’.
And based off this report, the aftermath has also impacted the health of Sydney’s water supply.
But as bad as this sounds, is Sydney really running out of water?
Or does the argument of a coming water ‘crisis’ go deeper than the impact of disasters?
For you see, even if these reservations are diminishing, this doesn’t mean we are ‘running out’ of water.
It just means we are, by design, running out of the small trickle that is allowed for us.
Let’s explore the bigger picture.
MANUFACTURED CRISIS
The first red flag to note with this report is the timeline in which the catchment is expected to worsen.
One report by the University of Sydney predicts the catchment will not be able to meet demands by.. you guessed it.. the magical year of 2030 (Agenda 2030).

They say desperate change will be ‘needed’ by 2030 to ‘change this projection’.
And this will have to happen all over the world.
The World Bank predicts that by 2025, two-thirds of the world’s population may face water shortages.
Today, nearly 400,000 Californians rely on drinking water that may contain chemical contaminants.
Nine thousand miles from California, Kenyans are facing even greater water shortages and the severe health risks that come with it. Extensive drought has led to extreme food insecurity and famine.
The groundwater in Germany which supplies almost 70% of the country’s drinking water is declining. Iran’s retreating Lake Urmia grows saltier as it shrinks and affects the water, soil and clean air available to local villagers. Prolonged droughts in Peru damage agriculture and access to clean water.
Everywhere you look, water is becoming a concerning issue.
And the elitist parasites look to cash in on this manufactured crisis.
Big tech and the WEF are looking for the best ways to invest and capitalise on this ‘worrying trend’.


They are here to offer the solution to the problem that they caused in the first place. A typical cycle.
For you see, the ‘problem’ is really not what we think it be.
Like recent stories of ‘food chain disruptions’, it isn’t the fact that there isn’t any fresh water to go around; quite the opposite. It is that the control and supply of this resource is a rigged game.
The fresh water has been bought up and privatised by the world’s corporate behemoths.
We witnessed a glimpse of this system during the 2019-20 bushfire season here in Australia, where water from Tamborine Mountain was sent to Coca-Cola for bottling, not to help Queenslanders.

The water is there.
It is just not owned by us, the people.
Across the world, other companies like Nestle continue to buy up massive water reserves that limited the natural resources available to growing populations in areas hit by ‘natural’ disasters.

As our limited supply of non-corporate water continues to deteriorate, these groups are set to come with ‘solutions’ that will ultimately involve rations, restrictions and a collective sharing of ‘finite resources’.
All united in the ‘battle’ against ‘climate change’.
So, yes, the catchment is in trouble.
But this is due to sophisticated government technology, not man-made ‘climate cycles’.
And the rest of the water that is available is owned by private interests.
The same private interests that will offer ‘solutions’ to the catchment problem.
Starting to see how things work here?

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I wish people would stop buying bottled water and put them out of business. Get a filter system for tap water and fill up a reuseable bottle, not hard, just a new habit and a good one. I recommend Ceramic filters to take out fluoride too. And get a rain tank if you can, you can use the same counter top filtering system if needed in a time of crisis.