Skip navigation

Crime no longer pays: Stronger water laws passed in NSW Parliament

MEDIA RELEASE 
14th November 2025 

The Nature Conservation Council NSW (NCC) has welcomed the passing of the Water Management Legislation Amendment (Stronger Enforcement and Penalties) Bill 2025, describing it as a historic step to protect rivers, wetlands and communities across NSW. 

The new laws give the Natural Resources Access Regulator (NRAR) stronger enforcement powers and massively increase penalties for illegal water take, sending a clear message that stealing water will no longer be treated as a cost of doing business. 

“Water theft undermines trust in our water system, harms communities and damages ecosystems that depend on every drop,” NCC Chief Executive Officer Jacqui Mumford said. 

“This bill is laser-focused on where water theft is happening — the big end of town. There are 39,000 water licence holders in NSW, but just 400 of them take 65% of the water. And of those 400, a majority — 57% — are large irrigation corporations, agribusinesses and mining companies. There are no mum-and-dad farmers in this group. These are big players who need real deterrents.” 

A landmark case investigated by NRAR in 2020 shows why the changes were needed. A major agribusiness was caught taking massive volumes of water without approval. The company was fined just $102,693.50 under the laws at the time. Under the new legislation, the penalty would have been closer to $10 million – reflecting the true scale of the offence. 

“For too long, small fines for stealing massive volumes of water were a minor cost of business for powerful companies. Those days are over,” Ms Mumford said. 

“This is a game-changer for water justice in NSW. When penalties are strong enough to strip away unlawful profits, we protect the rights of all water users and the health of our rivers.” 

The NCC said the new laws are a win for the environment, communities, and honest farmers who do the right thing. 

“Strong laws, fair enforcement, and real penalties mean our water can finally be managed for the public good — not exploited for private gain,” Ms Mumford said. 

These changes to enforcement alongside the recent cease to pump rules shows this government is taking water management seriously. NCC strongly recommends that the NSW Government ensures NRAR is adequately funded and resourced to enforce the law. 

ENDS 

Continue Reading

Read More

Budget boost for threatened wildlife, but underlying habitat destruction unchecked

June 23, 2026

MEDIA RELEASE   23 June 2026  New funding to help prevent the extinction of threatened and endangered wildlife in the budget is a much-needed investment, but stopping critical habitat destruction in the first place should be the priority, according to the Nature Conservation Council of New South Wales (NCC).  Today, NSW Treasurer Daniel Mookhey announced the NSW Budget 2026-27, including threatened species protection...

Read more

New analysis proves habitat clearing laws need urgent reform

June 18, 2026

MEDIA RELEASE June 18, 2026  A new report by Wentworth Group of Concerned Scientists, released this morning, has confirmed what we already know: Habitat clearing in NSW has spiralled since changes to the law in 2017. Nature Conservation Council of NSW (NCC) says the group’s analysis highlights the failure of our current nature laws and the...

Read more