This report sets out our decisions on the maximum prices that Water NSW can charge for its rural bulk water services, to apply from 1 October 2021. It presents prices and how these affect customers, and explains how we reached our decisions.
This technical paper explains how we forecast demand for CCC Water’s services to determine draft prices for water, wastewater and other related services.
This information paper sets out our draft decisions on water and wastewater prices. It explains how we set prices and key factors we considered in our draft decisions.
Letter to the Commission, NSW Office of Water about the release of the Draft Determination Pricing of Water management Services provided by NSW Office of Water.
Our Final Report sets out our final decisions on the maximum prices that Central Coast Council as a Water Supply Authority (CCC Water) can charge for its water, wastewater and other related services, to apply from 1 July 2022.
The Tribunal regulate the prices of bulk water extracted from regulated rivers, unregulated rivers and groundwater sources that State Water and the Department of Natural Resources may charge.
This Final Report details the Maximum prices that the NSW Office of Water can charge for the monopoly services it delivers on behalf of the Water Administration Ministerial Corporation.
Letter to Commissioner for Water (Department of environment, Climate Change and Water) that Clock Stopped in the 2009 review of Water Administration Ministerial Corporation Prices.
This sets out our decisions in simple English for our review of the maximum prices that Essential Water can charge for water and wastewater services from 1 January 2023 to 30 June 2026.
Price structures describe the relationship between the fixed charge and the usage charge, and the proportion of the total charge that each customer group pays.
Pricing regulation of State Water’s monopoly services in the Murray-Darling Basin valleys will transfer to the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) from 1 July 2014.
This report sets out our decisions on the maximum prices that WAMC can charge for its water management services, to apply from 1 October 2021. It presents prices and how these would affect customers, and explains how we reached our decisions.
Explains findings of Tribunal’s review of alternative structures for retail and wholesale water prices, to assess their potential to reduce demand for water in the Sydney Basin