Mr LITTLEPROUD (Maranoa—Minister for Water Resources, Drought, Rural Finance, Natural Disaster and Emergency Management) (15:08): Let me go to the point around the water market. Obviously, as I've gone around and done shed meetings with irrigators up and down the basin, both in the north and in the south, one of the great concerns that I was hearing, particularly exacerbated by the drought, is the cost of water. Ninety-three per cent of trades happened in the southern basin, where a lot of the conjecture is. Fourteen per cent of those that own water licences don't own land. Now, when state governments separated water from land, I don't know whether their intent was where the market has evolved to now. The government took swift action after listening to the concerns of real people on the ground in farmers' sheds. With the Treasurer, I've now nearly finalised terms of reference so the ACCC can get under the bonnet of the water market to make sure that the original intent of this market, when it was created, is still working and that small farming families are not taken out of it. This is a responsible step in making sure that we understand that the market is as pure as it was intended to be, and we will make sure that the terms of reference are broad enough so that the ACCC can give confidence to everybody. The transparency that is required within this Basin Plan will be seen through. The states also have a part to play in this. The SPEAKER: The minister will resume his seat for a second. The Leader of the Opposition on a point of order. Mr Albanese: The question was very specific. The SPEAKER: If you can just address what the point of order is. Mr Albanese: It's to relevance. The question was very specific about the impact of international speculators in the water market and the impact that that's having on farmers. I'm sure it has been raised with the minister in those very meetings he has spoken about. The SPEAKER: The Leader of the Opposition has made his point of order. The minister has the call. Mr LITTLEPROUD: I'll simplify it for the Leader of the Opposition. Within that 14 per cent are international players. We're not running away from that. That's why the ACCC will look at it. To keep it in simple terms: they will be taken into this inquiry by the ACCC. That 14 per cent are part of the cohort that we are looking at. That is a responsible action of a government that listens—that listens to the people, not just the bureaucrats. We've sat in the sheds and we've listened to real people. (Time expired)