Member of
Contributors
Date Issued
2011
Description
Australia is one of the driest continents on earth with most interior lands classified as steppe or desert. With an
expanding coastal population pushing farther inland, the need for freshwater increases for urban use, agriculture, and
industry and because there is little freshwater at the surface and most of the groundwater is too saline and generally
unsuitable for multiple uses, new sources of freshwater must be sought to sustain future development of Western
Australia’s interior. To mitigate this ongoing macroproblem, it is proposed to establish a new Southern Ocean maritime
sea-lane between Antarctica and Western Australia with the first large-scale deployment of very capacious floating
liquid freshwater containers (Stauber bags), barges hauled and shuttled regularly by carousel-type supertugboats to
convey a directly acquired, essentially cost-free, bulk-harvested potable subglacial Antarctic meltwater possibly siphoned
from beneath the floating Amery Ice Shelf and transported to Western Australia. Access of the floating liquid freshwater
containers to Perth, the capital city, would be up-slope the offshore Perth Canyon to the continental shelf. Stored
containers could lay off in the lee of Rottnest Island at the Perth Terminal. From there, freshwater could be transported
to wherever needed in coastal rural and urban Western Australia. On land, Pecero self-rolling bags could be used to
distribute all imported freshwater farther inland and serve also as stationary (parked) reservoirs. Stock watering, farm
irrigation, and drinking water as well as mineral mine, petroleum refinery, and sewage treatment processing are likely
additional income-producing consumptive users. Both bulk long-distance conveyance and long-term storage on land by
such means will naturally reduce the present-day stress on Western Australia’s domestic water supplies, storage, and
delivery systems that are limited by regional climates with long-term seasonal dryness. Freshwater imported would
absolutely reduce freshwater stress on Western Australia’s excessively exploited rivers and excessively mined aquifers.
expanding coastal population pushing farther inland, the need for freshwater increases for urban use, agriculture, and
industry and because there is little freshwater at the surface and most of the groundwater is too saline and generally
unsuitable for multiple uses, new sources of freshwater must be sought to sustain future development of Western
Australia’s interior. To mitigate this ongoing macroproblem, it is proposed to establish a new Southern Ocean maritime
sea-lane between Antarctica and Western Australia with the first large-scale deployment of very capacious floating
liquid freshwater containers (Stauber bags), barges hauled and shuttled regularly by carousel-type supertugboats to
convey a directly acquired, essentially cost-free, bulk-harvested potable subglacial Antarctic meltwater possibly siphoned
from beneath the floating Amery Ice Shelf and transported to Western Australia. Access of the floating liquid freshwater
containers to Perth, the capital city, would be up-slope the offshore Perth Canyon to the continental shelf. Stored
containers could lay off in the lee of Rottnest Island at the Perth Terminal. From there, freshwater could be transported
to wherever needed in coastal rural and urban Western Australia. On land, Pecero self-rolling bags could be used to
distribute all imported freshwater farther inland and serve also as stationary (parked) reservoirs. Stock watering, farm
irrigation, and drinking water as well as mineral mine, petroleum refinery, and sewage treatment processing are likely
additional income-producing consumptive users. Both bulk long-distance conveyance and long-term storage on land by
such means will naturally reduce the present-day stress on Western Australia’s domestic water supplies, storage, and
delivery systems that are limited by regional climates with long-term seasonal dryness. Freshwater imported would
absolutely reduce freshwater stress on Western Australia’s excessively exploited rivers and excessively mined aquifers.
Language
Type
Form
Extent
14 p.
Identifier
FAUIR000506
Date Backup
2011
Date Text
2011
Date Issued (EDTF)
2011
Extension
FAU
IID
FAUIR000506
Person Preferred Name
Richard B. Cathcart
Physical Description
14 p.
Title Plain
Antarctica-to-Western Australia Liquid Freshwater Shipments Using Stauber Bags in a Paternoster-Like Transfer System: Inaugurating a Southern Ocean Antidrought Action Sea-Lane
Origin Information
2011
Title
Antarctica-to-Western Australia Liquid Freshwater Shipments Using Stauber Bags in a Paternoster-Like Transfer System: Inaugurating a Southern Ocean Antidrought Action Sea-Lane
Other Title Info
Antarctica-to-Western Australia Liquid Freshwater Shipments Using Stauber Bags in a Paternoster-Like Transfer System: Inaugurating a Southern Ocean Antidrought Action Sea-Lane