Water Industry Competition (General) Regulation 2024 (NSW)
This regulation is the Water Industry Competition (General) Regulation 2024.
This regulation commences on 1 March 2024.
This regulation repeals and replaces the Water Industry Competition (General) Regulation 2021.
In this regulation—
The terms and conditions of the deemed customer contract are set out in this regulation, Schedule 4.
The Act and the Interpretation Act 1987 contain definitions and other provisions that affect the interpretation and application of this regulation.
In this regulation, a person has
For the Act, Dictionary, definition of
For the Act, Dictionary, definition of
(a) rainwater collected solely from roofs, or
(b) leachate collected from landfill.
For the Act, Dictionary, definition of
(a) the Australian Drinking Water Guidelines, published by the Australian Government, the National Health and Medical Research Council and the Natural Resource Management Ministerial Council,
(b) the Australian Guidelines for Water Recycling, including Phases 1 and 2, published by the Environment Protection and Heritage Council, the Natural Resource Management Ministerial Council and the Australian Health Ministers’ Conference.
For the Act, section 3A(f), the following purposes are prescribed—
(a) the supply of drinking water,
(b) the collection and treatment of groundwater for the production, supply and use of water,
(c) the collection and treatment of wastewater, other than sewage, stormwater or recycled water, for the production, supply and use of water.
For the Act, section 5(1)(d), water industry infrastructure operated by or on behalf of a council is declared to be water industry infrastructure to which the Act, Part 2 applies if it is used or is to be used for the production or supply of recycled water for the following purposes—
(a) washing or cleaning, including vehicles, paths, common areas or fences,
(b) toilets, laundries or washing machines,
(c) irrigation for the purposes of growing food,
(d) above ground irrigation of a golf course or public open space, including a park, sportsground or median strip, if the recycled water is wholly or partly obtained from the treatment of sewage.
Water industry infrastructure specified in subsection (1) includes a reticulation network connected to the infrastructure and used to convey anything to or from the infrastructure.
For the Act, section 5(2)(b), the following water industry infrastructure is excluded from the application of the Act, Part 2—
(a) water industry infrastructure specified in the Act, section 5(1)(c), if the infrastructure is not also covered by the Act, section 5(1)(a) or (b),
(b) water industry infrastructure specified in this regulation, section 7,
(c) water industry infrastructure specified in this regulation, Schedule 1.
Subsection (1)(a) and (b) apply to water industry infrastructure only if—
(a) the water industry infrastructure is—
(i) immediately before 1 March 2024, constructed but not yet operated by or on behalf of a council, or
(ii) immediately before 1 March 2024, operated by or on behalf of a council, or
(iii) on or after 1 March 2024, constructed and operated by or on behalf of a council, in accordance with an existing consent, and
(b) the construction or operation of the water industry infrastructure is not substantially modified or expanded on or after 1 March 2024.
In this section—
(a) a development consent or approval under the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979,
(b) for development not requiring development consent or approval under the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979—a resolution of the council.
The Act, section 5(2)(a) provides that the Act, Part 2 does not apply to water industry infrastructure within the area of operations of a public water utility and operated by or on behalf of the public water utility, other than as a last resort provider.
For the Act, section 5A(a), the following policies published by the Department in which the Act is administered, as in force from time to time, are prescribed—
(a) the NSW Water Strategy,
(b) the Greater Sydney Water Strategy,
(c) the Lower Hunter Water Security Plan.
A council may construct the following water industry infrastructure without a scheme approval if development consent has been granted under the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979 or if environmental assessment has been carried out in relation to the development under that Act, Division 5.1—
(a) a water storage facility for recycled water,
(b) a water reticulation system for recycled water.
Despite subsection (1), a scheme approval is required before the water industry infrastructure is connected to a water source.
See also the Act, section 6A, which provides that a person must not operate water industry infrastructure unless the infrastructure is substantially constructed as authorised by a scheme approval.
In this section—
For the Act, section 7C(1)(g), IPART must be satisfied that the relevant operator licence authorises the activities proposed under the scheme approval, having regard to all the water industry infrastructure to be operated under the operator licence.
For the Act, section 7D(1)(h), IPART must be satisfied that the relevant retailer licence authorises the activities proposed under the operational approval, having regard to all the water and sewerage services to be sold under the retailer licence.
It is a condition of a scheme approval for water industry infrastructure that a water meter must be installed for each household or business that is or will be serviced by the water industry infrastructure.
The water meter must comply with the requirements of the Plumbing Code of Australia, published by the Australian Building Codes Board, as in force from time to time.
A licence is subject to the conditions set out in Schedule 2, Part 1.
An operator licence is also subject to the conditions set out in Schedule 2, Part 2.
A retailer licence is also subject to the conditions set out in Schedule 2, Part 3.
For the Act, section 8H(1)(f), the licensee must give written notice to IPART within—
(a) 24 hours after proposing to cease to operate the water industry infrastructure for which the licensee is the registered operator, and
(b) 1 hour after ceasing to operate the infrastructure.
For the Act, section 8I(1)(a), the licensee must give written notice to IPART within—
(a) 24 hours after proposing to cease to provide retail services under the licence for a particular regulated scheme, and
(b) 1 hour after ceasing to provide the retail services.
Subsections (1)(a) and (2)(a) do not apply if the licensee ceases to operate water industry infrastructure or to provide retail services in an emergency.
For the Act, section 8H(1)(h)(ii), an agreement between a registered operator and a registered retailer must specify—
(a) the responsibilities of each licensee under a customer contract, including who is responsible for the following—
(i) installing, testing, repairing, maintaining, reading or replacing meters,
(ii) undertaking inspections, including inspections of backflow prevention devices or cross-connections in dual reticulation schemes, and
(b) the notification requirements for each licensee under a customer contract, including a requirement for a licensee to notify the other licensee when—
(i) a customer is connected to the regulated scheme, or
(ii) the water supply or sewerage service is interrupted, or
(iii) a customer makes a complaint, or
(iv) the licensee is notified that a customer or person living at the customer’s property has critical health needs, or
(v) a customer seeks or is granted an approval from the licensee.
The Minister may split a composite licence into its component licences on—
(a) the Minister’s own initiative, or
(b) the recommendation of IPART, or
(c) the application of the licensee.
An application by a licensee must be made to IPART and determined by the Minister.
If the Minister proposes to split a composite licence into its component licences under subsection (1)(a) or (b), the Minister must give the licensee at least 14 days to make submissions about the proposal.
For the Act, section 8N(4), the penalty for default is $5,500.
The terms and conditions of the deemed customer contract are set out in Schedule 4.
The registered operator of infrastructure that connects a scheme to premises must give written notice to the registered retailer for the infrastructure as soon as reasonably practicable after the premises are connected to the scheme.
Subsection (1) does not apply if the registered operator of infrastructure and the registered retailer are the same person.
IPART may modify or exclude the application of the deemed customer contract for a registered operator or a registered retailer on the joint application of the registered operator and registered retailer.
A modification or exclusion may apply generally or in specified circumstances.
An application for a modification or exclusion must be—
(a) made in the form and way determined by IPART, and
(b) accompanied by the fee determined by IPART.
IPART may determine different fees for different kinds of applications.
The fees must be published on IPART’s website.
The maximum increase is the Consumer Price Index All Groups Index for Sydney, published by the Australian Bureau of Statistics, for the most recent quarter.
A failure by a licensed operator or licensed retailer to determine an application for a review under the Act, section 47 within 20 business days after the application is made is taken to be a refusal to alter the decision to which the application relates.
For the Act, section 52(3), the IPART Act, Part 3 applies to a matter referred to IPART under the Act, section 52, subject to the following modifications—
(a) a reference to a government agency in the IPART Act, Part 3 is taken to be a reference to a monopoly supplier,
(b) the IPART Act, sections 15(1)(c) and (h), 16 and 18 do not apply.
If there is an inconsistency between a provision of this part and a provision of the IPART Act, Part 3, Division 7, the provision of this part prevails to the extent of the inconsistency.
This part applies to a matter referred to IPART under the Act, section 52 before or after 1 March 2024.
In this division—
(a) the determination of the pricing for the monopoly service, or
(b) the determination of pricing for services of a kind to which the monopoly service belongs.
This division does not limit the application of any other provision of the IPART Act, Part 3 in that Act’s application to an investigation by IPART under this division.
This division applies to an investigation by IPART into a determination of the pricing methodology for a monopoly service if a declaration under the Act, section 51 was in force in relation to the monopoly service immediately before 1 March 2024.
IPART is taken to have complied with the provisions of this division if IPART has substantially complied with, or has taken all reasonable steps to comply with, the provisions.
IPART must, as soon as it considers appropriate after the commencement of an investigation under this division, prepare an issues paper about the investigation.
The issues paper must set out the following matters—
(a) the pricing methodology and the general approach IPART proposes to adopt in conducting the investigation,
(b) significant methodological changes IPART proposes to consider,
(c) the date on which IPART proposes to hold public hearings on the issues paper.
The issues paper may include other matters IPART considers appropriate.
A copy of the issues paper must be—
(a) given to the investigated monopoly supplier, and
(b) made publicly available on the IPART website.
IPART must invite the investigated monopoly supplier and any other persons to make submissions about an issues paper.
IPART must also invite submissions to be made about submissions made by the investigated monopoly supplier on the issues paper.
Submissions must be—
(a) written, or
(b) given orally at a public hearing on the issues paper, as referred to in section 29.
IPART must specify the period in which submissions must be made.
Different periods may be specified for different submissions.
IPART may extend the period if IPART considers it appropriate.
Without limiting the application of the IPART Act, section 22A(3), written submissions about the issues paper made by the investigated monopoly supplier must be made publicly available on the IPART website.
The IPART Act, section 22A(3) enables IPART to restrict the disclosure of information contained in documents it makes available.
IPART must hold a public hearing to hear submissions on an issues paper.
The public hearing may be held over 1 or more days.
IPART may hear oral submissions on the issues paper at the public hearing from the investigated monopoly supplier and other persons IPART considers appropriate.
IPART must prepare a draft report about an investigation as soon as IPART considers appropriate after the conclusion of the public hearing on the issues paper about the investigation.
Before preparing the draft report, IPART must consider all submissions made in relation to the issues paper, including submissions about the investigated monopoly supplier’s submissions, that it considers material.
The draft report must include the following matters—
(a) the determination of pricing IPART proposes to make,
(b) the pricing methodology for the proposed determination,
(c) significant methodological changes and the reasons for the changes,
(d) the assumptions IPART has made for the proposed determination and the reasons for the assumptions,
(e) IPART’s response to submissions received on the issues paper that IPART considers material, including the reasons for accepting or not accepting, whether wholly or in part, material submissions made by the investigated monopoly supplier.
The draft report may include other matters IPART considers appropriate.
A copy of the draft report must be—
(a) given to the investigated monopoly supplier, and
(b) made publicly available on the IPART website.
IPART must invite the investigated monopoly supplier and any other persons to make written submissions about a draft report prepared under section 30.
IPART must specify the period in which submissions must be made.
Different periods may be specified for different submissions.
IPART may extend the period if IPART considers it appropriate.
Before IPART issues the final report about an investigation, IPART must consider all submissions made about the draft report prepared under section 30 that it considers material.
The final report must include the following matters—
(a) the pricing methodology applied for the determination of pricing IPART has made,
(b) significant methodological changes and the reasons for the changes,
(c) the assumptions IPART has made for the determination and the reasons for the assumptions,
(d) IPART’s response to submissions received on the draft report that IPART considers material, including the reasons for accepting or not accepting, whether wholly or in part, material submissions made by the investigated monopoly supplier.
The final report may include other matters IPART considers appropriate.
For the Act, section 55(3)(b), the criteria are the following—
(a) a licensee must be capable of operating the essential service,
(b) a licensee must be suitable having regard to the proximity of the licensee to the essential service,
(c) if the licensee is a licensed operator—the licence must authorise the same class of water industry infrastructure as the essential infrastructure.
The Minister may, on application by a licensee designated as a last resort provider under the Act, section 55(1), revoke the licensee’s designation.
An application for a revocation must be—
(a) made in the form and way determined by the Minister, and
(b) accompanied by the fee determined by the Minister.
The Minister must consult with IPART before determining an application, unless consultation is not reasonably practicable because of the urgency of the circumstances.
IPART may, by written notice, appoint a person, including a member of staff of IPART, as a technical expert to assist in the preparation or testing of contingency plans.
A person may be appointed by IPART as both a technical expert and an auditor.
IPART may require a contingency plan to be prepared or tested with the assistance of—
(a) for a contingency plan prepared by an essential service provider—a specific technical expert, or
(b) for a contingency plan prepared by an essential service provider or last resort provider—a technical expert from a panel of technical experts selected by IPART.
The technical expert may make recommendations about the contingency plan to the essential service provider, the last resort provider or IPART.
The last resort provider must prepare a contingency plan for an essential service.
Despite subsection (1), the essential service provider may prepare the contingency plan if the essential service provider gives notice to IPART, in the form and way approved by IPART, within 15 business days of the designation of the last resort provider.
A nominated provider for an essential service must submit a contingency plan to IPART for approval—
(a) within 6 months after the operational approval for the essential infrastructure is granted, or
(b) within a longer period approved by IPART.
IPART may, by written notice to both the last resort provider and essential service provider, approve a contingency plan with or without modification.
The nominated provider must, at intervals determined by IPART by written notice to the nominated provider, review and resubmit the contingency plan to IPART for approval.
The nominated provider may, at any time, modify and resubmit the contingency plan to IPART for approval.
In this section—
A contingency plan must identify the following—
(a) the essential service, including—
(i) the essential infrastructure that will be required to maintain the essential service if there is a declared failure, and
(ii) other infrastructure operated by a third party to which water or sewerage services are connected that will be required to maintain service to customers if there is a declared failure,
(b) the customers to whom the essential service is provided.
The contingency plan must also include the following—
(a) the information and systems that will be reasonably required by a last resort provider to continue to provide the essential service if there is a declared failure, and how the last resort provider will access the information and systems,
(b) the actions required by the failed licensee, or an administrator acting for the failed licensee, to facilitate the transfer of customer information to ensure minimal interruption to the operation of the essential service,
(c) arrangements under which staff of the essential service provider may assist the last resort provider,
(d) procedures for notifying the ombudsman appointed under an approved ombudsman scheme and IPART when the information, including customer information, has been transferred to the last resort provider,
(e) the requirements for giving written updates to IPART on the implementation of the contingency plan, including the content and timing of the updates,
(f) the information required to be given to a customer with the bill first required to be sent to the customer after the declared failure, including the following—
(i) details of the declared failure,
(ii) a description of the role of the last resort provider,
(iii) the contact details of the last resort provider,
(iv) the contact details of the approved ombudsman scheme,
(v) the last resort contract charges,
(vi) information about the last resort contract conditions and how customers may obtain a copy of the last resort contract conditions,
(g) if the last resort provider is a public water utility—the last resort contract conditions within the meaning of the Act, section 56C.
The information required under subsection (2) may be included in a contingency plan in the form of a directory that enables the last resort provider to access the information.
In this section—
(a) billing addresses and customer contact details,
(b) information about customers, or persons living at the customer’s property, with critical health needs,
(c) information about customers with payment difficulty or special payment arrangements.
This section applies if a contingency plan is to be prepared by the last resort provider.
A provider of an essential service for which a last resort provider has been designated must facilitate the preparation and review of the contingency plan by the last resort provider, including by—
(a) providing information that the last resort provider reasonably requires in a timely way, and
(b) giving the last resort provider a reasonable opportunity to inspect infrastructure and systems.
The essential service provider must notify the last resort provider of a change in systems or processes if the change—
(a) may require modification of the contingency plan, or
(b) is a change the last resort provider reasonably needs to be aware of.
The essential service provider must facilitate the conduct by the last resort provider of required exercises to test the operation of the approved contingency plan.
If a contingency plan is to be prepared by the essential service provider, the essential service provider must consult with the last resort provider about the contingency plan.
The following are prescribed as a person who may make a written request under the Act, section 55A(3)—
(a) the last resort provider, in relation to a contingency plan prepared by the last resort provider,
(b) the essential service provider, in relation to a contingency plan prepared by the essential service provider,
(c) a technical expert appointed by IPART under section 35, in relation to a contingency plan prepared by the last resort provider or essential service provider.
A contingency plan may require testing of the operation of the contingency plan.
IPART may direct a last resort provider to test the operation of a contingency plan prepared by the last resort provider.
IPART may direct an essential service provider to test the operation of a contingency plan whether the plan is prepared by the essential service provider or last resort provider.
Testing of the operation of a contingency plan may be carried out as part of an audit.
The essential service provider must pay the last resort provider the reasonable costs incurred by the last resort provider in complying with this part.
The last resort provider may submit a written request to the essential service provider specifying the amount.
If the essential service provider does not pay the last resort provider within 28 days of the written request, either the last resort provider or the essential service provider may apply to IPART for a determination of the amount.
The essential service provider must pay the amount determined by IPART to the last resort provider within 28 days of the determination.
IPART may, by written notice, require an essential service provider to pay a technical expert an amount for the reasonable costs incurred by the technical expert in the preparation or testing of a contingency plan.
The essential service provider must pay the technical expert within—
(a) 28 days after IPART gives written notice of the amount, or
(b) another period agreed between the essential service provider and the technical expert.
In this part—
(a) the reasonable requirements of the registered operator in relation to the provision of water or sewerage services to the development have been complied with, or the registered operator did not impose a requirement, and
(b) the registered operator will provide water or sewerage services to the development.
(a) a development consent within the meaning of the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979, or
(b) an approval under the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979, Part 5, or
(c) an approval under the Local Government Act 1993, Chapter 7, Part 1.
A consent authority must give the registered operator for water industry infrastructure written notice of an application for a development authorisation received by the consent authority if the consent authority considers the development would significantly affect the operation of the infrastructure.
Without limitation, development significantly affects the operation of water industry infrastructure if it may—
(a) increase the demand for water supplied by the infrastructure, or
(b) increase the amount of sewage to be removed by the infrastructure, or
(c) damage or interfere with, or adversely affect the operation of, the infrastructure.
The consent authority is not required to give notice under subsection (1) if the consent authority—
(a) refuses the application for the development authorisation, or
(b) approves the application and imposes a condition on the development authorisation that the developer must obtain a certificate of compliance from the registered operator.
The consent authority must take into account submissions from the registered operator in relation to an application for a development authorisation that has been notified under subsection (1) in deciding whether to—
(a) approve the application for the development authorisation, or
(b) impose a condition on the development authorisation.
Subsection (4) does not apply if—
(a) the consent authority imposes a condition on the development authorisation that the developer must obtain a certificate of compliance from the registered operator, or
(b) the consent authority does not receive submissions from the registered operator within 21 days after the notice was given to the registered operator.
In this section—
A developer who proposes to connect development to water industry infrastructure operated, or to be operated, under the Act may apply to the registered operator for the infrastructure for a certificate of compliance.
An application may be made whether or not obtaining a certificate of compliance is a condition of the development authorisation.
The application must be accompanied by—
(a) a copy of the application for the development authorisation, or
(b) if the application for the development authorisation has been approved—a copy of the development authorisation.
Before determining an application for a certificate of compliance, the registered operator may, by written notice (a
(a) pay a specified amount to the registered operator to cover the whole or part of the relevant costs as assessed by the registered operator,
(b) enter into an agreement providing for one or more of the following—
(i) the payment of the amount to the registered operator or as directed by the registered operator,
(ii) the construction, or the construction and manner of construction, of works for the purposes of connecting the development to the water industry infrastructure,
(iii) the transfer of works to the registered operator,
(c) provide reasonable security, in a form approved by the registered operator, for performance of an agreement under paragraph (b),
(d) additional or ancillary matters necessary to give effect to a requirement under paragraphs (a)–(c).
The registered operator may withdraw a requirement contained in a notice under this section and the requirement is taken to have not been made.
In this section—
The registered operator must determine the costs of the following—
(a) the cost of water industry infrastructure that benefits or is available to the land, if the infrastructure is or will be constructed—
(i) by or on behalf of the registered operator or a predecessor of the registered operator, or
(ii) at the request of the registered operator or a predecessor of the registered operator, or
(iii) under an agreement with the registered operator or a predecessor of the registered operator,
(b) the cost of expanding the registered operator’s water industry infrastructure as a result of the development,
(c) the investment costs incurred by the registered operator or a predecessor of the registered operator and by developers in relation to the existing and proposed water industry infrastructure referred to in paragraphs (a) and (b).
The registered operator must determine the costs under subsection (1)(a) based on net present value, historical cost or other appropriate basis.
The registered operator may also have regard to expected operating costs and revenues in determining the costs under subsection (1)(a) if the registered operator considers it appropriate.
A registered operator may issue a certificate of compliance to a developer without serving a requirements notice on the developer.
A registered operator must issue a certificate of compliance to the developer if satisfied a requirements notice given to the developer has been complied with.
A registered operator must, at the developer’s request, issue a certificate of compliance to the developer if, within the relevant period—
(a) a certificate of compliance has not been issued to the developer, and
(b) a requirements notice has not been given to the developer.
A certificate of compliance may, instead of being issued in relation to all of the development, be issued progressively in relation to a stage of the development.
A certificate of compliance may be issued to replace a certificate of compliance previously granted.
In this section—
(a) 60 days after the developer applies for a certificate of compliance, or
(b) a further period approved by IPART and notified to the developer within the 60 days.
A certificate of compliance may be issued unconditionally or subject to reasonable conditions.
Without limitation, a certificate of compliance may be issued subject to a condition requiring an agreement entered into under a requirements notice to be complied with.
A developer does not comply with a requirement to obtain a certificate of compliance until the developer complies with the conditions imposed on the certificate.
An unconditional certificate of compliance may be issued to replace a certificate of compliance previously granted subject to conditions.
Money owing to a person under a requirements notice is recoverable by the person as a debt in a court of competent jurisdiction.
This section does not affect a power or remedy the person otherwise has.
IPART may, by written notice, appoint a person, including a member of staff of IPART, as an auditor for—
(a) audits generally, or
(b) a specified audit or class of audits.
An audit must be undertaken by an auditor appointed by IPART under subsection (1).
IPART may by written notice—
(a) engage an auditor to undertake an audit, or
(b) direct the applicant or the licensee subject to the audit to engage a specified auditor or an auditor from a panel of auditors to undertake an audit.
The written notice may specify the following—
(a) the scope of the audit,
(b) the functions of the auditor,
(c) limitations on the functions of the auditor.
The functions of an auditor undertaking an audit are the following—
(a) to review, assess or advise on the matters specified by IPART,
(b) to report to IPART about the review, assessment or advice under paragraph (a),
(c) other functions conferred by or under the Act.
IPART may charge the applicant or the licensee subject to the audit (the
IPART may defer consideration of an application until the fee under subsection (1) is paid.
The fee under subsection (1) is recoverable by IPART as a debt in a court of competent jurisdiction.
The fee for an audit undertaken by an auditor engaged by the audit target under section 54(3)(b) is payable by the audit target.
If an application audit is undertaken in relation to an application, IPART must consider the audit in exercising IPART’s functions under the Act or this regulation in relation to the application to which the audit relates.
An auditor may accompany an inspector who enters premises under the Act, Part 7A for the purpose of exercising the auditor’s functions as an auditor.
This section does not prevent an auditor from—
(a) entering or remaining on premises, or doing anything else on premises, with the consent of the occupier of the premises, or
(b) entering or remaining in a public place while the place is open to the public.
In this section—
For the Act, section 90(1)(e), IPART’s functions under the Act, sections 55 and 57 are prescribed.
For the Act, section 93B(2), the fixed period is—
(a) for an application for a scheme approval—90 days from the day on which the application is lodged with IPART, or
(b) otherwise—60 days from the day on which the application is lodged with IPART.
For the Act, section 93B(4), the following are not to be counted in the fixed period—
(a) the period from 1 March 2024 until the end of 1 March 2025,
(b) a public holiday,
(c) the period declared by the Premier as the Christmas closedown period,
(d) a period provided to the applicant or other persons to make submissions about the application to IPART,
(e) a period during which an application audit is undertaken,
(f)
a period during which IPART is exercising functions as a determining authority under the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979, Division 5.1, Subdivision 2, in relation to the application, but not more than 30 days,
(g) a period during which IPART is exercising functions as a determining authority under the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979, Division 5.1, Subdivision 3, in relation to the application.
The Minister may, by notice published in the Gazette, regulate or restrict the use, supply or consumption of water supplied by a registered operator or registered retailer, including by regulating or restricting the following—
(a) the purposes for which water may be used,
(b) the times when water may be used,
(c) the quantities of water that may be used,
(d) the means or methods of the use of water.
The Minister may issue a notice only if the Minister considers it is necessary because—
(a) there is a drought or other emergency, or
(b) it is in the public interest and for the purpose of maintaining water supply.
A notice may apply to—
(a) the whole of the area of operations of a registered operator or registered retailer, or
(b) a specified part of the area of operations.
A notice takes effect on—
(a) the day the notice is published in the Gazette, or
(b) a later day specified in the notice.
A person must not use or consume water in contravention of a notice under this section.
Maximum penalty for subsection (5)—
(a) for a corporation—50 penalty units, or
(b) for an individual—5 penalty units.
The Minister may, by notice published in the Gazette, declare that a local water restrictions order applies to the use or consumption of water supplied by a registered operator or registered retailer in a particular area in the same way as it applies to the use or consumption of water supplied by the public water utility in that area or another area.
A declaration must not be made if the registered operator or registered retailer derives its water from a different water source to the water source from which the public water utility derives its water.
Subsection (2) does not apply if the Minister is satisfied the circumstances giving rise to the local water restrictions order apply to both water sources.
A person must not use or consume water in contravention of a local water restrictions order as applied by this section.
Maximum penalty—
(a) for a corporation—50 penalty units, or
(b) for an individual—5 penalty units.
This section does not limit section 61.
In this section—
(a) the Hunter Water Act 1991,
(b) the Local Government Act 1993,
(c) the Sydney Water Act 1994,
(d) the Water Management Act 2000.
If a notice under section 61 or 62 is in force and applies to the use or consumption of water by customers of a registered operator or registered retailer, the registered operator or registered retailer may restrict the supply of drinking water or recycled water to a customer if satisfied that the customer is or may be contravening section 61(5) or 62(4).
For the Act, section 82—
(a) each offence created by a provision specified in Schedule 3, Column 1 is an offence for which a penalty notice may be issued, and
(b) the amount payable for the penalty notice is the amount specified in Column 2 or 3.
If the provision is qualified by words that restrict its operation to limited kinds of offences or to offences committed in limited circumstances, the penalty notice may be issued only for—
(a) that limited kind of offence, or
(b) an offence committed in those limited circumstances.
The Water Industry Competition (General) Regulation 2021 is repealed.
An act, matter or thing that, immediately before the repeal of the Water Industry Competition (General) Regulation 2021, had effect under that regulation continues to have effect under this regulation.
section 8(1)(c)
In this schedule—
(a) a Local Aboriginal Land Council constituted under the Aboriginal Land Rights Act 1983,
(b) a registered native title body corporate within the meaning of the Native Title Act 1993 of the Commonwealth,
(c) an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander corporation registered under the Corporations (Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander) Act 2006 of the Commonwealth.
(a) an entity in the Australian Capital Territory licensed under the Utilities Act 2000 of the Australian Capital Territory to provide a utility service under that Act, section 11 or 13,
(b) a service provider under the Water Act 2000 of Queensland,
(c) an Authority under the Water Act 1989 of Victoria,
(d) the South Australian Water Corporation under the South Australian Water Corporation Act 1994 of South Australia.
Water industry infrastructure that is—
(a) a work to which the Water Act 1912, Part 2 extends, and
(b) used solely for the purposes of taking water under an entitlement to take and use water created by the issue of the following under the Water Act 1912—
(i) a licence under Part 2, Division 3,
(ii) a permit under Part 2, Division 3B,
(iii) an authority under Part 2, Division 4,
(iv) a group licence under Part 2, Division 4A,
(v) an entitlement under section 20AB.
Water industry infrastructure that is—
(a) a work constructed under the authority conferred by a licence under the Water Act 1912, Part 5, Division 3, and
(b) used solely for the purposes of taking water under the authority conferred by a licence under that division.
In this section—
Water industry infrastructure that is—
(a) a water supply work within the meaning of the Water Management Act 2000, and
(b) used solely for the purposes of taking and transporting water under an entitlement created by the Water Management Act 2000, section 52, 53, 55, 56, 89, 90 or 91.
Water industry infrastructure that is used for removing and treating groundwater from a construction site or building, known as de-watering, under a licence or approval under the Water Management Act 2000, if the groundwater is used for irrigation on the site or otherwise disposed of.
Water industry infrastructure if—
(a) the infrastructure is constructed or operated under an approval under the Local Government Act 1993, Chapter 7, Part 1 in force on 1 March 2024, and
(b) the approval remains in force, and
(c) the construction or operation of the infrastructure is not substantially modified or expanded on or after 1 March 2024.
Water industry infrastructure constructed or operated for or on behalf of a NSW Government agency.
Water industry infrastructure used to supply water or provide sewerage services, or both, to public water utilities or registered operators, or both, from an Interstate entity.
Water industry infrastructure used to supply water or provide sewerage services, or both, that—
(a) is owned by an Interstate entity, and
(b) services land managed by an Aboriginal organisation.
Water industry infrastructure operated by Icon Water Limited that is used to supply water to the Australian Capital Territory or Queanbeyan-Palerang Regional Council from the Googong Dam Area, as authorised under the Canberra Water Supply (Googong Dam) Act 1974 of the Commonwealth.
Water industry infrastructure that services land managed by an Aboriginal organisation if the infrastructure—
(a) is not able to be connected to water industry infrastructure operated by a public water utility because it is not practicable or economical to connect the infrastructure, or
(b) has been able to be connected to water industry infrastructure operated by a public water utility for less than a year, and that, before that ability arose, was not able to be connected to water industry infrastructure operated by a public water utility.
Water industry infrastructure that is—
(a) located only on land on which a single dwelling house or dual occupancy is located, whether or not the dwelling is used for a business purpose, and
(b) used solely for the purposes of supplying water or a sewerage service to the dwelling house or dual occupancy.
In this section—
Water industry infrastructure owned by a relevant customer if the infrastructure is used by the relevant customer solely to reticulate or convey the water, or provide sewerage services, to the following—
(a) a tenant or lessee of the customer,
(b) if the customer is the owners corporation for a strata scheme under the Strata Schemes Management Act 2015—an owner of a lot in the strata scheme within the meaning of that Act,
(c) if the customer is the operator of a retirement village under the Retirement Villages Act 1999—a resident of the retirement village within the meaning of that Act,
(d) if the customer is the operator of a community under the Residential (Land Lease) Communities Act 2013—a home owner in the community within the meaning of that Act,
(e) an owner of a development lot, strata lot or neighbourhood lot within the meaning of the Community Land Management Act 2021,
(f) if the customer is the park owner of a holiday park under the Holiday Parks (Long-term Casual Occupation) Act 2002—an occupant of the holiday park within the meaning of that Act.
Water industry infrastructure owned by a relevant customer if the infrastructure services land managed by an Aboriginal organisation.
This section applies only if—
(a) for the supply of water—the infrastructure is not designed for the treatment or further treatment of the water, other than treatment for maintaining water quality, and
(b) for sewerage services—the infrastructure is not designed for the treatment of sewage for disposal or recycling, and
(c) the water or sewerage service is supplied at a cost that represents no more than the cost of providing the water or sewerage service and the cost of the operation and maintenance of the infrastructure.
In this section—
Water industry infrastructure used solely for the purpose of stormwater drainage, but not including—
(a) the capture of stormwater for reuse, or
(b) the conveyance of stormwater to a treatment facility to be reused.
Water industry infrastructure that is—
(a) owned by a customer of a public water utility, registered operator or registered retailer to whom water is supplied by that public water utility, registered operator or registered retailer, and
(b) used by the customer solely to heat or chill that water to provide heating and cooling services to its customers, without the water being further treated.
Water industry infrastructure used for the production, treatment, filtration, storage, conveyance or reticulation of water sourced only from roof water if the water is supplied—
(a) for a non-potable use, and
(b) without charge, either in the form of a fee or a requirement for other consideration.
Water industry infrastructure used for the production or supply of recycled water for the purposes of above ground irrigation of a golf course or public open space, including a park, sportsground or median strip, if the recycled water is sourced only from stormwater.
Water industry infrastructure used for water sensitive urban design, including, for example, rain gardens, constructed wetlands, bio-retention and swales.
Water industry infrastructure used for providing water or sewerage services to accommodation for workers, as referred to in the Work Health and Safety Act 2011, section 19(4).
Water industry infrastructure used for the treatment of stormwater or recycled water for the supply and use of recycled water by a person (the
(a) the infrastructure is operated by or on behalf of the supplier, and
(b) the water is not supplied to another person, other than a related body corporate, within the meaning of the Corporations Act 2001 of the Commonwealth, of the supplier.
This section applies only to water industry infrastructure if it is not also covered by the Act, section 5(1)(a) or (b) or this regulation, section 7.
section 14
The licensee must, while water is being supplied to premises for which a water meter has been installed, ensure—
(a) the water meter is properly maintained and periodically tested, and
(b) the water meter is read at intervals of no more than 4 months, and
(c) written notice of each meter reading is sent to the relevant registered retailer.
This section applies to both the licensed operator and licensed retailer unless there is a written agreement between both parties that 1 party will comply with a requirement under this section on behalf of both parties.
The licensee must give the Minister or IPART information required from time to time by the Minister or IPART in relation to the licensee’s activities under the licence.
The licensee must give the Minister or IPART the information within the time specified by the Minister or IPART.
The licensee must immediately notify the following persons of an incident in the conduct of the licensee’s activities that threatens, or could threaten, water quality or public health or safety—
(a) IPART,
(b) the Minister administering the Public Health Act 2010,
(c) a person, other than the licensee, who is the registered operator or registered retailer of the water industry infrastructure to which the incident relates,
(d) other registered operators or public water utilities with infrastructure connected to the water industry infrastructure to which the incident relates.
The notice must be given in the form and way determined by IPART.
The licensee must permit the following matters concerning the licensee to be included on the register under the Act, section 89B—
(a) the matters required to be recorded on the register under the Act, section 89B,
(b) the matters that IPART considers appropriate to be included on the register.
The licensee must permit the disclosure between relevant government agencies of information the licensee has given to a relevant agency.
The licensee must permit the disclosure to the general public of information about incidents reported under section 3.
In this section—
(a) that is involved in the administration of the Act, or
(b) to which information is given under the Act, this regulation or a licence condition.
If the licensee is taken to have entered into a deemed customer contract under the Act, section 46AB, the licensee must comply with the terms and conditions of the deemed customer contract.
If a customer, a person living at a customer’s property, or a representative of the customer or person, notifies the licensee that the customer or a person living at the customer’s property has critical health needs, the licensee must treat the customer or person as a customer or person with critical health needs for this regulation, including the deemed customer contract.
The licensee must develop and implement an asset management plan or asset management system in relation to the water industry infrastructure constructed and operated by the licensee.
An asset management plan must include policies and procedures relating to the construction and operation of the water industry infrastructure, including the following—
(a) the safe and reliable construction, operation and maintenance of the infrastructure,
(b) the redundancy built into the infrastructure and the arrangements for the renewal of the infrastructure,
(c) the continuity of water supply or sewerage services and alternative water supply or sewerage service arrangements,
(d) the maintenance, monitoring and reporting of standards of service.
An asset management system must be consistent with AS ISO 55001:2014, Asset management—Management systems—Requirements.
The licensee must—
(a) comply with the asset management plan or asset management system, and
(b) regularly review and update the asset management plan or asset management system to ensure it complies with this section, and
(c) amend the asset management plan or asset management system in accordance with a direction by the Minister or IPART.
The licensee must develop and implement a water quality management system if the water industry infrastructure for which the licensee is the registered operator is for the production or supply of drinking water or recycled water.
The water quality management system for water industry infrastructure for drinking water must be consistent with the Australian Drinking Water Guidelines, published by the Australian Government, the National Health and Medical Research Council and the Natural Resource Management Ministerial Council, as in force from time to time.
The water quality management system for water industry infrastructure for recycled water must be consistent with the Australian Guidelines for Water Recycling, including Phases 1 and 2, published by the Environment Protection and Heritage Council, the Natural Resource Management Ministerial Council and the Australian Health Ministers’ Conference, as in force from time to time.
The licensee must—
(a) comply with the water quality management system, and
(b) regularly review and update the water quality management system to ensure it complies with this section, and
(c) amend the water quality management system in accordance with a direction by the Minister or IPART.
A water quality management system may be combined with a sewage management system developed under section 9.
The licensee must develop and implement a sewage management plan or sewage management system if the water industry infrastructure for which the licensee is the registered operator will be used for the conveyance, treatment and disposal of sewage.
The sewage management plan or sewage management system must deal with the conveyance, treatment and disposal of sewage by the water industry infrastructure, including the following—
(a) how health and ecological assessments will be undertaken,
(b) how a concern arising from an assessment will be addressed,
(c) the arrangements for the disposal of waste from the infrastructure.
The licensee must—
(a) comply with the sewage management plan or sewage management system, and
(b) regularly review and update the sewage management plan or sewage management system to ensure it complies with this section, and
(c) amend the sewage management plan or sewage management system in accordance with a direction by the Minister or IPART.
This section does not apply if the water industry infrastructure is the subject of a licence under the Protection of the Environment Operations Act 1997.
A sewage management system may be combined with a water quality management system developed under section 8.
A water meter must be connected to each premises to which the licensee supplies water.
The water meter must comply with the requirements of the Plumbing Code of Australia, published by the Australian Building Codes Board, as in force from time to time.
The licensee must take all reasonable steps to give customer information to the following persons within 5 days after the event occurs—
(a) if the licensee is substituted by another licensee under the Act, section 89C—the other licensee,
(b) if the Minister makes an order under the Act, section 57A in relation to the licensee—the public water utility that will provide the water or sewerage service on a permanent basis,
(c) if the Minister makes an order under the Act, section 57B(1)(a) in relation to the licensee—the other licensee that will provide the essential service,
(d) if the scheme for which the licensee is the registered operator is acquired by a public water utility—the public water utility.
In this section—
(a) the deposited plan, strata plan or community plan number of a customer’s property,
(b) the details of customers that require services for medical or other critical reasons,
(c) the details of customers subject to a deemed customer contract modified under this regulation, section 21 and the details of the modifications,
(d) the details of the infrastructure on the customer’s property.
If the deemed customer contract applies to any customer of the licensee, the licensee must publish IPART’s summary of the deemed customer contract on the licensee’s website.
The licensee must, each year, give a copy of IPART’s summary to any customer to whom the deemed customer contract applies.
In this section—
If the Minister notifies the licensee that a NSW Government social program applies to the licensee, the licensee must implement or facilitate the implementation of the social program.
The licensee must maintain and implement a procedure for receiving, responding to and resolving customer complaints (a
The customer complaints procedure must be consistent with AS 10002:2022, Guidelines for complaint management in organizations.
The licensee must publish on the licensee’s website information about—
(a) how a customer may make a complaint, and
(b) how the licensee will receive, respond to and resolve a complaint, and
(c) a customer’s right to complain to the Energy and Water Ombudsman NSW.
The licensee must give a copy of the information to—
(a) all of the licensee’s customers annually, and
(b) a customer on request.
The licensee must, on request by IPART or an auditor, give IPART or the auditor a report on the complaints the licensee has received.
The report must be given in the form and way determined by IPART or the auditor.
The licensee must maintain and implement a process for dealing with payment difficulty and debt recovery (a
The payment difficulty process must provide for the following—
(a) how the licensee will identify customers experiencing difficulty paying bills,
(b) how the licensee will ensure a customer is treated in a fair and reasonable way when experiencing difficulty paying bills,
(c) the types of payment plans available, including the tailoring of a payment plan to an individual customer experiencing difficulty paying bills,
(d) the circumstances in which the licensee may disconnect or restrict the supply of water to a customer’s premises consistent with the customer contract,
(e) the ways in which the licensee will assist customers to better manage current and future bills.
The payment difficulty process must be consistent with the customer contract.
The licensee must publish the payment difficulty process on the licensee’s website.
The licensee must give a copy of the payment difficulty process to—
(a) all of the licensee’s customers annually, and
(b) a customer on request.
The licensee must maintain and implement a family violence policy.
The family violence policy must provide for the following—
(a) the protection of private and confidential information,
(b) access to payment difficulty programs,
(c) processes that minimise the reliance on individuals to disclose family violence,
(d) processes for referrals to specialist family violence services.
The licensee must publish the family violence policy on the licensee’s website.
The licensee must give a copy of the family violence policy to—
(a) all of the licensee’s customers annually, and
(b) a customer on request.
A notice or bill that the licensee must send to its customers, whether under the Act, this regulation or a licence condition, must include, or be accompanied by, information about—
(a) the available community translation services, including telephone numbers, and
(b) the National Relay Service for hearing or speech-impaired customers.
The information must be given in English, Mandarin, Cantonese, Arabic, Vietnamese and Hindi.
The licensee must supply water or sewerage services consistently with the conditions of a scheme approval or operational approval that apply to water industry infrastructure for which the licensee is the registered retailer.
The licensee must ensure recycled water is only supplied to customers for a purpose authorised by the relevant operational approval (a
The licensee must, before the licensee supplies recycled water to a customer, specify the permitted end uses of recycled water in a written notice to the customer.
The notice must also include information about how to safely use recycled water.
The licensee must not enter into water supply arrangements under which the licensee assumes obligations the licensee is unable to meet, or advertise that the licensee is willing to enter into water supply arrangements, having regard to the following—
(a) the capacity of the relevant water source to supply water or the volume of water available to the licensee from the water source,
(b) the quality of the water derived from the water source,
(c) the water industry infrastructure from which the water will be supplied,
(d) the conditions on which the licensee has access to the water industry infrastructure.
The licensee must not enter into a water supply arrangement with a customer unless the premises to which the water will be supplied are connected to, or readily connectible to, a water main—
(a) to which the licensee has access, whether under an access agreement, access determination or otherwise, or
(b) that forms part of the relevant scheme.
The licensee must not enter into sewerage service arrangements under which it assumes obligations the licensee is unable to meet, or advertise that it is willing to enter into arrangements, having regard to the following—
(a) the water industry infrastructure from which the services are to be provided,
(b) limitations on the capacity of the water industry infrastructure to treat and dispose of sewage,
(c) the conditions on which the licensee has access to the water industry infrastructure.
The licensee must not enter into a sewerage service arrangement with a customer unless the premises to which the service will be provided are connected to, or readily connectible to, a sewer main to which the licensee has access, whether under an access agreement, access determination or otherwise.
The licensee must take all reasonable steps to give customer information to the following persons within 5 days after the event occurs—
(a) if the licensee is substituted by another licensee under the Act, section 89C—the other licensee,
(b) if the Minister makes an order under the Act, section 57A in relation to the licensee—the public water utility that will provide the water or sewerage service on a permanent basis.
In this section—
(a) the deposited plan, strata plan or community plan number of a customer’s property,
(b) the details of customers that require services for medical or other critical reasons,
(c) the details of customers subject to a deemed customer contract modified under this regulation, section 21 and the details of the modifications,
(d) the details of the infrastructure on the customer’s property.
section 64
Column 1 | Column 2 | Column 3 |
Provision | Penalty for corporation | Penalty for individual |
Section 6(1) | $8,000 | $4,000 |
Section 6A(1) | $8,000 | $4,000 |
Section 6B(1) | $8,000 | $4,000 |
Section 7H(2) | $8,000 | $4,000 |
Section 7I(2) | $8,000 | $4,000 |
Section 8J | $8,000 | $4,000 |
Section 9(7) | $8,000 | $4,000 |
Section 10B(3) | $8,000 | $4,000 |
Section 55A(3) | $8,000 | $4,000 |
Section 56B(4) | $1,500 | $750 |
Section 65(4) | — | $500 |
Section 66A(1) | $8,000 | $4,000 |
Section 67 | $1,500 | $750 |
Section 68 | $1,500 | $750 |
Section 69 | $1,500 | $750 |
Section 70 | $1,500 | $750 |
Section 71(1) | $1,500 | $750 |
Section 72(1) | $1,500 | $750 |
Section 73(1) | $1,500 | $750 |
Section 73A(1) | $8,000 | $4,000 |
Section 73B | $8,000 | $4,000 |
Section 84Q(3) | $8,000 | $4,000 |
Section 61(5) | $440 | $220 |
Section 62(4) | $440 | $220 |
section 19
This contract is the deemed customer contract referred to in the Act, section 46AB.
This contract applies to you if you are a small retail customer who is the owner of premises to which water or sewerage services are provided by a regulated scheme.
A small retail customer is a person who owns or occupies small retail customer premises and receives or is proposed to receive, directly or indirectly, water or sewerage services. Small retail customer premises may include premises that are used for residential or small business purposes. See the Act, Dictionary, definitions of
The contract is between you and—
(a) the operator of the scheme that provides water or sewerage services to your property, and
(b) the retailer for the scheme.
You and the operator and retailer must comply with this contract.
The contract applies automatically and you or the operator and retailer do not have to sign anything agreeing to this contract.
This contract may be modified or excluded if—
(a) you or your representative request a modification or exclusion from the operator or retailer in writing, and
(b) you and the operator or retailer agree to the modification or exclusion in writing.
You are not bound by a modification or exclusion to the contract that applied to a previous owner of your property.
This clause cannot be modified or excluded.
This clause does not apply to you if your property is used solely for residential purposes.
If your property is permanently disconnected from the scheme with the approval of the operator under clause 44, there is no longer a contract between you and the operator and retailer for the services.
This does not affect your rights or obligations, or the rights or obligations of the operator and retailer, that accrue before the permanent disconnection.
The words used in this contract—
(a) are defined in the Dictionary in Part 15 of this contract, and
(b) otherwise have the same meaning as in the Act and the regulation.
In this contract, a word in the singular includes the plural, and a word in the plural includes the singular.
In this contract,
Scheme infrastructure does not include pipes, fittings or apparatus located—
(a) downstream of a connection point for your property to a water main that is part of the scheme infrastructure, or
(b) upstream of a connection point for your property to a sewer main that is part of the scheme infrastructure.
The operator, and not the retailer, is responsible for the scheme infrastructure.
The operator is responsible for damage or loss caused by a failure of the scheme infrastructure.
The operator is responsible for, and must pay for, clearing a blockage in the scheme infrastructure, other than to the extent that you contributed to the blockage.
In this contract,
(a) for a water service provided to your property—all pipes, fittings and apparatus located downstream of the connection point to a water main that is part of the scheme infrastructure, and
(b) for a sewerage service provided to your property—all pipes, fittings and apparatus located upstream of the connection point to a sewer main that is part of the scheme infrastructure.
You, and not the operator or retailer, are responsible for your plumbing and for the cost of work on your plumbing, including blockages.
You are responsible for damage or loss caused by a failure of your plumbing.
You may engage, and pay for, a plumber to clear a blockage in your plumbing.
If you share your plumbing with others, for example, if your property is in a strata scheme or you otherwise receive services jointly with other properties from a shared connection point, the sharing of the responsibility for the plumbing is based on an agreement between you and the others and the relevant law.
This contract covers—
(a) drinking water services, recycled water services and sewerage services provided to your property by the operator, and
(b) related services provided by the retailer.
Subject to this contract, and, in particular, the operator’s powers under this contract to restrict or disconnect the services to your property, the operator must ensure that the services are provided to your property to meet your reasonable needs.
If the services provided to your property include the supply of drinking water, the operator must ensure that the drinking water complies with the Australian Drinking Water Guidelines, published by the Australian Government, the National Health and Medical Research Council and the Natural Resource Management Ministerial Council, from time to time.
If NSW Health specifies additional standards for drinking water, the operator must also comply with the additional standards.
If the services provided to your property include the supply of recycled water, the operator must ensure that the recycled water complies with the relevant provisions of the Australian Guidelines for Water Recycling, including Phases 1 and 2, published by the Environment Protection and Heritage Council, the Natural Resource Management Ministerial Council and the Australian Health Ministers’ Conference, from time to time.
If NSW Health specifies additional standards for recycled water, the operator must also comply with the additional standards.
If the services provided to your property include the supply of water, the operator must ensure the water head of pressure for drinking water is at least 15m per head of pressure.
The operator must make information about the water head of pressure for the scheme that may generally be expected easily available to customers on the operator’s website.
The information must differentiate between water head of pressure for drinking water and recycled water if applicable.
If the services provided to your property include a sewerage service, the operator must use its best endeavours to minimise the incidence of treated or untreated sewage overflow on your property due to a failure of the scheme infrastructure.
If you or someone who lives at your property is a person with critical health needs and the services provided to your property include the supply of drinking water, you or your representative must notify the retailer.
The retailer must keep a list of customers, and persons living at a customer’s property, with critical health needs that are dependent on drinking water supply to the extent that an interruption to drinking water supply poses an immediate and major health or safety risk.
The operator and the retailer must use their best endeavours to provide a continuous drinking water service to meet the reasonable health needs of persons with critical health needs.
You or your representative must notify the retailer if a person with critical health needs—
(a) ceases to live at your property, or
(b) ceases to be a person with critical health needs.
If you or someone who lives at your property is a person with critical health needs—
(a) the operator will notify you of a planned interruption to the drinking water service, and
(b) the operator will alert you, whenever possible, that drinking water supply has been interrupted in an emergency.
You should be ready to make alternative arrangements or have contingencies in place for the supply of drinking water to operate a life support machine or for other critical health needs.
You may only discharge trade waste into the sewerage service if you have obtained written permission from, and entered into an agreement with, the operator or retailer for the sewerage service.
The operator or retailer for the scheme may refuse to accept trade waste into the scheme if the operator or retailer reasonably believes the trade waste poses a risk to—
(a) the scheme’s operation, or
(b) the health and safety of workers, or
(c) the operator’s ability to service its broader customer base.
In this clause—
(a) produced at a property during non-residential activity, or
(b) stored on or produced or transported by a vehicle, including a motor vehicle, plane, boat or train, or
(c) comprised of waste from a portable toilet or septic tank, or
(d) comprised of run-off from land that is contaminated within the meaning of the Contaminated Land Management Act 1997.
The operator gives no other warranty about the services provided to your property.
The operator may restrict or disconnect a service provided to your property at any time if it is necessary to do so to carry out work that is unexpectedly and urgently needed or to prevent or minimise a risk to human health or safety or the environment.
The operator must use its best endeavours to contact you or the occupier of the property in person or by phone about the restriction or disconnection before the service is restricted or disconnected to carry out work that is unexpectedly and urgently needed or to prevent or minimise a risk to human health or safety or the environment.
(ii) your property would have been connected to infrastructure with a different design or capacity, or
(c) you intentionally cause damage to the scheme infrastructure.
See also clause 39, which allows the operator or retailer to restrict or disconnect a service if you have not paid an overdue amount in certain circumstances.
If the operator or retailer restricts or disconnects a service under subclause (1)(a), the operator or retailer must not—
(a) reduce the flow of drinking water below that necessary for basic sustenance and hygiene, or
(b) if you have told the retailer that you are a customer with critical health needs or a person with critical health needs lives at your property—disconnect your water supply or reduce the flow of drinking water to your property, or
(c) reduce the flow of sewage from your property below that necessary for basic hygiene.
If the operator or retailer restricts or disconnects a service under subclause (1)(a), the operator or retailer must disconnect the service only if the matter is sufficiently serious to warrant disconnection.
Before the operator or retailer restricts or disconnects a service under subclause (1), the operator or retailer must give you a written notice that—
(a) sets out the reasons for the restriction or disconnection, and
(b) invites you to make submissions within a specified period of at least 7 days as to why the service should not be restricted or disconnected, and
(c) if the restriction or disconnection is under subclause (1)(a)—specifies the following—
(i) the action you must take or not take to avoid the restriction or disconnection,
(ii) the period of at least 30 days after the date of the written notice within which you must take or not take the action.
A restriction or disconnection under this clause may only be carried out before 3pm on a day that is not a Friday, Saturday, Sunday or public holiday in New South Wales.
If your property is disconnected from the scheme, the operator or retailer may recover equipment of the operator or retailer installed on your property.
Despite subclause (2)(b), the operator or retailer may disconnect your water supply or reduce the flow of drinking water to your property if you do not give the retailer medical evidence of the critical health needs on request and within the period required by the retailer.
Immediately following restriction or disconnection of your water or sewerage service by the operator under clause 39 or 40(1)(a), the retailer must give you information about what you must do to have your service restored.
You may have to pay a fee for restoration of the service.
The fee may vary depending on the urgency with which you need the service to be restored.
When you have met the conditions for service to be restored, the operator must—
(a) restore the service as soon as reasonably practicable, and
(b) use its best endeavours to restore the service on the day on which the conditions for restoration are met, unless you agree otherwise.
If the services provided to your property include the supply of recycled water, you must comply with the requirements specified in the written notice given to you under clause 53(3) for the safe use of the recycled water.
If the services provided to your property include a sewerage service, you must not discharge the substances specified in the written notice given to you under clause 53(4) from your property into the scheme infrastructure.
If the services provided to your property include a pressure sewer system, you must comply with the requirements specified in the written notice given to you under clause 53(5) for the operation and maintenance of the pressure sewer system.
The operator and retailer are not responsible for damage or loss caused by a failure of you or anyone else to comply with your obligations under this clause.
If the failure causes damage or loss to the operator or retailer or anyone else, you are liable for the damage or loss.
If you do not comply with your obligations under this clause, the operator may restrict or disconnect the service to which the obligations apply in accordance with clause 40.
You must report to the retailer, as soon as reasonably practicable, if you become aware of the following—
(a) you or a person undertaking work for you or on your property may have caused damage to—
(i) the scheme infrastructure or its operation, or
(ii) a meter used in connection with the provision of services to your property,
(b) there is a defect in the plumbing on your property that may have caused damage to—
(i) the scheme infrastructure or its operation, or
(ii) a meter used in connection with the provision of services to your property,
(c) an incident that has occurred on your property may—
(i) adversely affect the scheme infrastructure or its operation, or
(ii) cause a risk to human health or safety or the environment to arise from the operation of the scheme infrastructure,
(d) there is a connection to a stormwater drain or sewer main on your property which is not authorised,
(e) there is a potential cross-connection between recycled water and drinking water infrastructure.
You must obtain the prior approval of the operator for the following—
(a) work on the scheme infrastructure,
(b) work on your plumbing that may affect the operation of the scheme infrastructure,
(c) a new connection, or a change to a connection, between your plumbing and the scheme infrastructure,
(d) the disconnection of your plumbing from the scheme infrastructure,
(e) extracting anything from the sewer main that is part of the scheme infrastructure.
An application for an approval may be made to the operator or retailer.
You should make the application as early as possible to allow the operator time to make a decision.
The operator—
(a) may impose a charge for the application, and
(b) must consider the application as soon as reasonably practicable, and use its best endeavours to do so within 10 business days, and
(c) must give you written notice of the operator’s decision, and
(d) if approval is given—may impose conditions on the approval, and
(e) must not, in determining an application or imposing a condition, constrain the installation or use of plumbing fixtures, appliances or equipment designed for facilitating the efficient use of water.
You must ensure compliance with the conditions of an approval.
If you undertake an activity without a required approval or you fail to comply with the conditions of an approval, the operator may restrict or disconnect the relevant service in accordance with clause 40.
If the services provided to your property include the supply of water and the standard contract charges include a usage charge, the operator or retailer must supply a meter to measure the quantity of water supplied to your property.
You will be charged for the quantity of water supplied to your property as measured by the meter, except as otherwise provided in this part.
The meter for water usage will be read for each billing cycle in accordance with this part.
If you are supplied both drinking water and recycled water, separate meters must be used to measure the quantity of drinking water and the quantity of recycled water supplied to your property.
The Act, section 65 authorises an employee or agent of an operator or retailer appointed as a meter reader to enter your property for the purpose of reading a meter.
The occupier of your property is entitled to ask the meter reader to produce the meter reader’s identity certificate for inspection.
A meter reader may only enter your property for the purpose of reading a meter during normal business hours.
A meter reader is not entitled to enter a part of a building used for residential purposes except with the consent of the occupier.
You must allow the operator or retailer, or a person authorised by the operator or retailer, to enter your property to install, test, maintain or replace meters for measuring the usage.
You must not—
(a) remove, damage or interfere with a meter, or
(b) allow a meter to be removed, damaged or interfered with by another person.
You must ensure—
(a) a meter is reasonably and safely accessible, and
(b) the meter and visible pipe connected to the meter must be clear of concrete, trees, bushes and other plants or obstructions.
You may engage, and pay for, a plumber to relocate your meter.
The plumber must only relocate the meter in accordance with the connection requirements published on the operator’s website.
If there is a failure to comply with an obligation relating to a meter under this clause, the operator may restrict or disconnect the relevant service in accordance with clause 40.
If a meter cannot be read because you do not provide reasonable and safe access to the meter, you may be charged the reasonable cost of the failed attempt to read the meter and you may be billed on an estimate of your usage.
If a meter cannot be read because you do not provide reasonable and safe access to the meter on 2 or more consecutive occasions, the operator or retailer may—
(a) after making a reasonable attempt to consult you, relocate the meter at your cost, or
(b) seek access to the meter at a time suitable to you and charge you for the reasonable cost of reading the meter at that time, or
(c) ask you to read the meter on their behalf, or
(d) make other arrangements with you.
An estimated usage for a billing cycle may be used if usage charges are payable for a service provided to your property and—
(a) the operator or retailer has attempted to read the meter but has not been able to do so as necessary for a billing cycle, or
(b) a meter for the service has been tested and found to be inaccurate, or
(c) a meter for the service has been removed or interfered with so that an accurate meter reading is not available, or
(d) a service has been unlawfully obtained without measurement by a meter.
If subclause (1) applies, the usage of the service for the billing cycle may be estimated on a basis that is representative of the usage pattern for the service.
If, in the retailer’s opinion, there is no satisfactory basis on which to make an estimate under subclause (2), the retailer may determine a method for calculating the usage charge after consulting you.
If you think that a meter is not accurately recording water passing through it, you may ask the retailer to test it.
Who conducts the test will depend on arrangements between the operator and retailer.
The retailer may require you to pay the costs of the meter test before the test.
Costs paid under subclause (2) must be refunded if the meter is shown to be inaccurate.
The retailer must send you the meter test results at your request.
If the test shows that the meter is recording at least 4% more than the actual amount of water passing through it, the retailer must—
(a) replace or repair the meter, and
(b) refund any costs paid by you for the test, and
(c) recalculate your bill on a basis that is representative of your usage pattern.
If, in the retailer’s opinion, there is no satisfactory basis on which to make a calculation under subclause (5)(c), the retailer may determine a method for calculating the charge after consulting you.
The Act, Part 6, Division 2 authorises an authorised agent of the operator to enter your property—
(a) to carry out an inspection or maintenance work on its scheme infrastructure, or
(b) to carry out necessary repair work on its scheme infrastructure, or
(c) to carry out emergency work on its scheme infrastructure.
The owner or occupier of your property must provide safe access for an authorised agent to exercise the functions under the Act.
The authorised agent must show the certificate of authority for inspection to the owner or occupier of your property if asked.
Except in an emergency, a power of entry may be exercised only during daylight hours.
An authorised agent must not enter a part of a building used for residential purposes except—
(a) with the consent of the occupier or, if there is no occupier, the owner, or
(b) under the authority conferred by a warrant of entry obtained under the Act, Part 6, Division 2.
In exercising functions under the Act, Part 6, Division 2, the authorised agent must—
(a) do as little damage as practicable, and
(b) subject to that division, compensate all persons who suffer damage by the exercise of the functions.
Compensation may be made by reinstatement, repair, construction of works or payment.
You, or an occupier of your property, affected by the exercise or proposed exercise of a function under the Act, Part 6, Division 2 may apply to the Energy and Water Ombudsman NSW for review of a decision to exercise the function.
The Act, section 60 allows the operator to require you to remove a tree, shrub or other plant, including its roots, if the operator has reasonable cause to believe that it is destroying, damaging or interfering with the scheme infrastructure.
The Act, section 60 deals with whether or not the cost will be reimbursed and with other related matters.
The retailer must give you a written notice—
(a) before services are first provided to your property, and
(b) with your first bill for your property.
The written notice must contain the following information—
(a) the scheme and a link to the IPART register on IPART’s website,
Note— The Act, section 89A requires IPART to keep a register.
(b) the services provided to your property,
(c) the property to which the services are to be provided,
(d) the location of connection points between your property and scheme infrastructure,
(e) the details of the operator and retailer,
(f) for each operator and retailer—
(i) a phone number on which the operator or retailer may be contacted between 8.30am and 5.30pm Monday to Friday, excluding public holidays in New South Wales, and
(ii) a postal address, and
(iii) a website you may use to contact the operator or retailer,
(g) the 24-hours fault line,
(h) where to find information about pensioner rebates,
(i) where to find information about the customer complaints procedures,
(j) the requirement that you must tell the retailer if you or a person living at your property has critical health needs,
(k) the details of the last resort providers for the service.
If the services provided to your property include the supply of recycled water, the written notice must also specify the requirements you must comply with for the safe use of the recycled water.
If the services provided to your property include a sewerage service, the written notice must also specify the substances you must not discharge from your property into the scheme infrastructure.
If the services provided to your property include a pressure sewer system, the written notice must also specify the requirements you must comply with for the operation and maintenance of the pressure sewer system.
If there is a change to the information given to you in a written notice under clause 53, the retailer must give you another written notice, so that the information is always up to date.
The obligations specified in clause 53(3)–(5) cannot be changed unless you are given written notice of the change and the date the change comes into effect.
A change cannot come into effect until at least 30 days after the date on which you are given the written notice.
You are taken to have received a written notice sent to you by the operator or retailer under this contract—
(a) when the notice is given to you personally, or
(b) when the notice is left with a person apparently over 16 years of age at the last residential or business address you gave the operator or retailer, or
(c) if the notice is posted to you at the last billing, residential or business address you gave the operator or retailer—when the notice would ordinarily be delivered by post, or
(d) if the notice is sent to you by email to the last email address you gave the operator or retailer—when the email was sent, or
(e) if you have not given a billing, residential or business address to the operator or retailer—when the notice is left in a prominent place on the property.
Depending on the arrangements between the operator and retailer, the retailer may give you a notice on behalf of the operator or the operator may give you a notice on behalf of the retailer.
You must, at the request of the retailer, give the retailer your name, residential or business address, and billing address, which may be an email address.
You must tell the retailer as soon as possible if the information changes.
You must, at the request of the retailer, give the retailer information about your plumbing, and how it is used or intended to be used, if the information is reasonably needed for the provision of the services.
If there is a material change to your plumbing or how it is used or intended to be used, you must tell the retailer.
If you change the use of your property and the quantity of water needed for the new use is substantially different, or the quantity or type of sewage discharged from your property for the new use is substantially different, you must tell the retailer of the change of use.
You must, at the request of the retailer, give the retailer information about whether or not your property is leased.
You must not make a statement that is false or misleading, including by omission, in information given to the operator or retailer under this contract.
The operator and retailer may exchange information about your creditworthiness, credit standing, credit history or credit capacity with the following—
(a) credit reporting agencies,
(b) credit providers,
(c) suppliers,
(d) the agents, contractors and franchisees of the operator or retailer,
(e) if your property is in a strata scheme, community scheme or company title scheme—the owners corporation, operator or agent of the scheme.
If your property is in a strata scheme, community scheme or company title scheme, the operator and retailer may obtain your contact details, including your address if you do not live at the property, from the owners corporation, operator or agent of the scheme.
The operator and retailer must comply with their obligations under relevant legislation dealing with privacy and access to information.
The operator is taken to have received a written notice sent by you to the operator under this contract—
(a) when the notice is delivered to an office of the operator or retailer, or
(b) if the notice is posted to an office of the operator or retailer—when the notice would ordinarily be delivered by post, or
(c) if the notice is sent to the operator or retailer by email to the last email address given to you by the operator or retailer—when the email was sent.
The retailer is taken to have received a written notice sent by you to the retailer under this contract—
(a) when the notice is delivered to an office of the retailer, or
(b) if the notice is posted to an office of the retailer—when the notice would ordinarily be delivered by post, or
(c) if the notice is sent to the retailer by email to the last email address given to you by the retailer—when the email was sent.
If there is a change in the operator or retailer (the
(a) the contract between you and the former operator or retailer ceases to exist, and
(b) a contract exists between you and the new operator or retailer.
This does not affect your rights or obligations, or the rights or obligations of the former operator or retailer, that accrue before the change.
Any modifications or exclusions that you agreed with the former operator or retailer do not apply to the contract with the new operator or retailer unless you and the new operator or retailer agree to them.
The operator and retailer must not charge you fees for changing to a new operator or retailer.
If the new operator or retailer is a public water utility, this contract does not apply and the public water utility’s customer contract applies instead.
If services provided to your property are provided by essential infrastructure and the operator or retailer is declared under the Act to have failed, a last resort provider will step in to provide the services.
There will no longer be a contract between you and the failed operator or retailer for the services but there will be a contract between you and the last resort provider for the services.
The Act will govern the terms of the contract between you and the last resort provider for the services.
This does not affect your rights or obligations, or the rights or obligations of the failed licensee, that accrue before the failure.
Information, including personal information, may be given to the last resort provider to enable the services to continue to be provided.
The charges for the services may also change as allowed for by the Act.
You may apply to the operator or retailer for a review of—
(a) a matter arising under this contract, or
(b) the exercise or proposed exercise of powers under the Act, Part 6, Division 2 by or on behalf of the operator, or
(c) other matters prescribed by the regulation.
If you cannot resolve a dispute with the retailer, you may contact the Energy and Water Ombudsman NSW, which provides a free service.
clause 5
In this part—
During the transition period, IPART may, at the same time as IPART exercises its functions under the Act, Schedule 4, clause 10 in relation to an existing licence, vary a condition of the existing licence in the same way as the Minister may have varied a condition of a licence under former Part 2.
During the transition period, IPART may determine a pending licence application at the same time as IPART exercises its functions under the Act, Schedule 4, clause 10 in relation to an approval or licence that applies to the same water industry infrastructure.
If IPART grants a licence under the Act, Schedule 4, clause 10, IPART must determine the pending licence application as an application for the variation of a licence under substituted Part 2, section 8M.
If IPART grants an approval under the Act, Schedule 4, clause 10, IPART must determine the pending licence application as an application for a variation of an approval under substituted Part 2, section 7K.
During the transition period, IPART may determine a pending licence application made by a holder of an existing licence in relation to water industry infrastructure not already authorised under the existing licence at the same time as IPART exercises its functions under the Act, Schedule 4, clause 10 in relation to an approval or licence granted to the holder of the existing licence.
If IPART grants a licence under the Act, Schedule 4, clause 10, IPART must determine the pending licence application as an application for the variation of a licence under substituted Part 2, section 8M.
If IPART grants an approval, IPART must determine the pending licence application as an application for a scheme approval under substituted Part 2, other than sections 7 and 12.
During the transition period, the Act, Part 5A applies to an interim scheme and an interim last resort provider in the same way that part applies to essential infrastructure and a last resort provider under that part, subject to the modifications set out in this section.
Section 56C(6), definition of
the standard contract conditions of the interim last resort provider as set out in the last resort provider’s customer contract, subject to the modifications approved by IPART.
This regulation, Part 5, Divisions 2 and 3 do not apply to an interim last resort provider.
The network operator and retail supplier of an interim scheme must give the following information to the interim last resort provider—
(a) the contact details for the staff of the interim scheme that are necessary for the interim scheme to continue to operate safely and reliably,
(b) the details of customers, or other persons living on the premises, who have critical health needs, in case of a last resort event.
The information under subsection (4) must be given to the interim last resort provider—
(a) within 20 business days of 1 March 2024, and
(b) within 7 days of a change in the information given.
An interim scheme ceases to be an interim scheme and an interim last resort provider ceases to be an interim last resort provider for the interim scheme within 10 business days of—
(a) IPART determining that the interim scheme is not essential infrastructure, or
(b) if IPART determines that the interim scheme is essential infrastructure—the Minister designating a last resort provider.
In this section—
(a) Sydney Water for the Barangaroo South, Box Hill North, Central Park, Discovery Point, Glossodia, Kurrajong, Pitt Town and Shepherds Bay interim schemes,
(b) Hunter Water for the Catherine Hill Bay, Cooranbong and Huntlee interim schemes,
(c) Yass Valley Council for the Gundaroo interim scheme.
Scheme | Licensed operator | Licensed retailer |
Barangaroo South | CPE Barangaroo Recycled Water Pty Ltd under licence no. 15_029 | CPE Barangaroo Recycled Water Pty Ltd under licence no. 15_034R |
Box Hill North | Altogether Operations Pty Ltd under licence no. 16_037 | Altogether Group Pty Ltd under licence no. 13_001R |
Catherine Hill Bay | Catherine Hill Bay Water Utility Pty Ltd under licence no. 16_035 | Solo Water Pty Ltd under licence no. 15_036R |
Central Park | Altogether Central Park Pty Ltd under licence no. 12_022 | Altogether Group Pty Ltd under licence no. 13_001R |
Cooranbong | Altogether Cooranbong Pty Ltd under licence no. 15_033 | Altogether Group Pty Ltd under licence no. 13_001R |
Discovery Point | Altogether Discovery Point Pty Ltd under licence no. 13_025 | Altogether Group Pty Ltd under licence no. 13_001R |
Glossodia | Altogether Operations Pty Ltd under licence no. 19_043 | Altogether Group Pty Ltd under licence no. 13_001R |
Gundaroo | Kyeema Wastewater Pty Ltd under licence no. 20_044 | Kyeema Wastewater Pty Ltd under licence no. 20_45R |
Huntlee | Altogether Huntlee Pty Ltd under licence no. 15_030 | Altogether Group Pty Ltd under licence no. 13_001R |
Kurrajong | Aquacell Pty Ltd under licence no. 15_032 | Aquacell Pty Ltd under licence no. 09_004R |
Pitt Town | Altogether Pitt Town Pty Ltd under licence no. 10_014 | Altogether Group Pty Ltd under licence no. 13_001R |
Shepherds Bay | Altogether Operations Pty Ltd under licence no. 17_042 | Altogether Group Pty Ltd under licence no. 13_001R |
Water Industry Competition (General) Regulation 2024 (51). LW 1.3.2024. Date of commencement, 1.3.2024, sec 2. This Regulation has been amended as follows—
No 48 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 2025. Assented to 15.8.2025. Date of commencement of Sch 3, assent, sec 2(e). |
Sec 3 | Am 2025 No 48, Sch 3.16. |
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