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Plant upgrade helps safeguard drinking water supply for Coast residents

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Seqwater has poured $8 million into a plant upgrade to provide Sunshine Coast residents with safe drinking water.

Five water filters at Landers Shute Water Treatment Plant, Montville, were upgraded last month.

The plant treats water from Baroon Pocket Dam and is the primary source of drinking water for the Sunshine Coast.

The plant is supplied with raw water from the Baroon Pocket catchment and can treat up to 140 megalitres a day, the equivalent of 56 Olympic-sized swimming pools.

The primary filters play a key role in providing safe drinking water by removing contaminants from raw water before it goes through further advanced stages of the water treatment and disinfection processes.

The filter refurbishment is part of a wider $24 million investment project to safeguard the lifespan of the existing primary water filters and strengthen water infrastructure resilience for the plant.

Seqwater executive general manager, operations, Fiore Zulli said the upgrade would ensure water security for the Sunshine Coast and Brisbane.

Coast residents can be confident about the provision of safe drinking water.

“We know the Sunshine Coast area is experiencing rapid population growth, urban expansion, and increasing economic activity,” Mr Zulli said.

“To improve water supply and security for local communities, Seqwater is focussed on upgrades to the SEQ Water Grid from Brisbane to the Sunshine Coast.

“The completion of this project significantly improves the plant’s performance without the need for major filter upgrades for at least another 15 years.

“Landers Shute will be a more resilient asset delivering continued reliability to customers across the Sunshine Coast and north Brisbane.”

A second $16 million stage of the upgrade will focus on the construction of a new process to treat seasonal filter-clogging algae from Lake Baroon.

This project is currently out for tender, with construction starting early 2026.

Completion of the water filter upgrade took just under nine months, with principal work undertaken by Freyssinet Australia.

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