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River Condition Index (RCI)

The NSW River Condition Index (RCI) is the primary long-term reporting tool for assessing riverine condition. It is used to combine a range of indicators into a single condition score. The indicators include riparian vegetation, geomorphic condition, hydrologic stress, biodiversity, catchment disturbance and water quality.

The RCI was developed using the Framework for the Assessment of River and Wetland Health (FARWH) approach. The FARWH is an accepted approach applied throughout Australia. The FARWH method uses existing data collection activities and converts them into a standardised and nationally comparable representation of river health.

The River Condition Index: method document provides a detailed explanation of the index and how it has been applied across NSW.

Data and Resources

Metadata Summary What is metadata?

Field Value
Language English
Alternative Title RCI
Edition 1.0
Purpose The NSW River Condition Index (RCI) is the primary long-term reporting tool for assessing riverine condition for use in catchment and environmental reporting. The tool uses inputs from a range of indicators (Water Quality, Catchment Disturbance, Riparian Vegetation, Geomorphic Condition, Hydrologic Stress, and Biodiversity). The RCI combines the input indices into an overall assessment of riverine condition for NSW.
Frequency of change As needed
Keywords WATER
Metadata Date 2023-01-17
Date of Asset Creation 2022-12-16
Date of Asset Revision 2022-12-16
Date of Asset Publication 2022-12-16
License Creative Commons Attribution 4.0
Geospatial Topic Location
Extent

Dataset extent

Temporal Coverage From 2022-07-01 - 2023-01-31
Datum GDA94 / NSW Lambert
Legal Disclaimer Read
Attribution NSW Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water asserts the right to be attributed as author of the original material in the following manner: "© State Government of NSW and NSW Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water 2022"
Groups Department of Planning and Environment—Water