Last Monday, a couple spoke to an ABC television reporter on the back steps of their home on the edge of Wollongong’s Lake Illawarra. They were confident that the flood they could see in front of them would not rise beyond the level it had reached. After all, they’d been living there for 19 years and no flood in that time had exceeded that level. (more…)
Chas Keys
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Climate change: Scott Morrison’s achilles heel
Scott Morrison has a problem with climate change which reflects his style of governing. (more…) -
Will central Lismore be abandoned after yet another flood.
Now that the floodwaters have hopefully gone and communities are focusing on recovery, the question of ‘relocation’ has become central in discussions about the future. (more…)
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A ten-point plan for managing floods in Australia
All flood crises are more or less wasted, and the ones we have just experienced in New South Wales and Queensland will probably be no different. (more…)
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The problem on the floodplain where we should not be building.
After Lismore’s horrific flood, we simply must reconsider our approach to development on floodplains. (more…)
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Grace Tame stayed true to her cause and her self in meeting an unhelpful PM
Tame’s critics came from the right, and they attacked their target’s alleged rudeness rather than dealing with the legitimacy of her approach. (more…)
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Cricket cannot afford to go back to the bad old days of abuse
Bored by the lack of an Ashes contest, past players are creating mischief by calling for a return to sledging. These calls must be rejected.
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Raise Warragamba dam, raise the risk to the environment
More housing, less habitat. More extinctions, less vegetation. With the raising of Australia’s largest urban water supply dam, Sydney would be further primed to emulate the flood disasters of Brisbane. (more…)
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The political problem of defining “flood prone”
The words ‘flood’ and prone’ are simple enough to comprehend, but when they are put next to each other in a sentence they can quickly become problematic. (more…)
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Alarming inconsistency: NSW Government Ministers on development in flood-prone areas
The floods on the eastward-flowing rivers of New South Wales have abated, but when they were at their height there were some alarming differences between state government ministers on the important matter of development on the floodplains of the Hawkesbury-Nepean River system.
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The ‘levee paradox’: why has development in floodplains exploded?
In March we were reminded that flooding is a problem in Australia. It is a problem partly because of the way we accommodate our growing population on floodplains. (more…)
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The meaning of the word ‘floodplain’ – and the consequences of building on one
One of the great challenges of city building is building sustainably. Many of our towns and cities are built at least in part on floodplains, which are by definition problematic as places on which to build.
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Re-thinking flood mitigation and development, especially in the Hawkesbury-Nepean Valley
The rain has gone, the floods on the eastward-flowing rivers are receding in Queensland and New South Wales and the focus has shifted from response to recovery. But there’s another important matter which needs to be addressed mitigation, or the means by which we can reduce the impacts of future flooding. Let’s look at this in the context of attempts that have been and could be made to manage floodwater and ensure that flood peaks are kept as low as reasonably possible.