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Sunshine Coast Water Recycling: The Infrastructure Keeping Up with Growth

Advanced water treatment is enabling new residential development as population climbs.

By The Daily Sunshine Coast · 20 June 2026 at 5:34 pm · 2 min read · 226 words Updated

Verified by the The Daily Sunshine Coast editorial team. This story was reviewed by our editorial team. Last verified: 28 June 2026.

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Updated 27 June 2026 at 12:04 pm

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Sunshine Coast Water Recycling: The Infrastructure Keeping Up with Growth
Photo: Photo by Colin Dixon on Pexels

Sunshine Coast Council's water recycling program has expanded to become one of the most comprehensive in Queensland, with Class A recycled water networks serving new residential estates across the Aura development at Caloundra South and extending incrementally into established areas. The program directly addresses the water supply pressure created by a population that has grown by more than 30,000 people in five years.

The Kawana Water Reclamation Plant processes wastewater from across the Sunshine Coast and produces recycled water to an advanced treatment standard. Water from the plant is used for irrigation of public open spaces, sporting fields, and, through dedicated purple pipe networks, household non-potable uses in new estates.

Seqwater's long-term supply plan identifies the Sunshine Coast as a region requiring additional surface storage infrastructure within the next 15 years under medium population growth scenarios. Early planning for a new dam on the Stanley River headwaters has begun, though community and environmental consultation phases typically extend such timelines significantly.

Council water efficiency programs have maintained per-capita consumption at levels that would have been considered ambitious targets a decade ago. Smart metering rollout across the network has enabled leakage detection and real-time consumption monitoring that has improved system efficiency beyond what behavioural programs alone could achieve.

This article was compiled by AI from the sources linked above and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.

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Published by The Daily Sunshine Coast

This article was produced by the The Daily Sunshine Coast editorial desk and covers community in Sunshine Coast. See our editorial standards for how we use AI.

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