There's nothing new about that idea, NWLady.
[h=1]Water pipeline from Perth to Kalgoorlie: 1894 -1903
[/h]The Australian Pipeliner — April 2007
In this day and age of water shortages, requiring new water pipelines, it is extremely interesting to look back to the end of the nineteenth century and examine how C. Y. O’Connor’s ambitious Coolgardie Water Scheme overcame the political and engineering hurdles involved.
The story starts with gold finds in and around the Kalgoorlie area in Western Australia and the need for water to sustain the goldfields. In 1893 the then-Premier of Western Australia, Sir John Forrest, said: “Gold in this colony is found only in the most out-of-the-way places, the most desolate places, far away from water, and where it is difficult to obtain supplies.”
Not only that, rainfall was low in the Kalgoorlie goldfields and what rain fell was quickly lost in the porous earth or evaporated.
To O’Connor the problem was a simple one. On the coast they enjoyed a rainfall of over thirty inches per year. At Kalgoorlie the average rainfall was uncertain because there had been few records taken, but it seemed to be about nine or ten inches a year. Why not imprison some of the millions of gallons of water that went to waste each year on the coast and pump it to Kalgoorlie?
The proposal was greeted with derision. Who had ever heard of such a thing? Pump 5,000,000 gallons per day to Coolgardie, a distance of over 300 miles, through 30 inch steel pipes? The idea was absurd, impossible!
.... Skipping a lot of detail here. Full story here
http://pipeliner.com.au/news/water_pipeline_from_perth_to_kalgoorlie_1894_-1903/040096/
The project grew and grew until the water finally flowed on 24 January 1903 into the reservoir constructed at Mt. Charlotte near Coolgardie. Forrest turned a silver valve head that sent water flowing on to Kalgoorlie. There were huge celebrations with congratulations all round. Gone were the doubting Thomases and vindictive critics.
More than seven years had passed since Forrest had accepted O’Connor’s plans and estimates of some 2,500,000 pounds to construct the project. Initial consumption at the Goldfields proved to be some 1,260,000 gallons daily.
Today, some 9 million gallons daily flow through the concept delivered by O’Connor.