Don't
expect Tony Abott to take any notice
Floods
could have catastrophic impact on Australia’s east coast, study
warns
Mega-storms
exacerbated by climate change would spell disaster for populated
coastal communities
11
October, 2013
A
repeat of the worst floods charted over the past 150 years,
potentially exacerbated by climate change, would have a “catastrophic
impact” on coastal communities on the eastern seaboard of
Australia, a new study has warned.
Bureau
of Meteorology research of a 1,500km stretch of Australia’s east
coast, reaching from Brisbane south to Eden, found that more than 600
people died from floods between 1860 and 2012.
In
total, 253 major floods occurred in this time, caused by tropical
cyclones and locally originating “east coast lows”.
Many
of these large floods occurred in the late 19th and early 20th
centuries. The report warns that a repeat of these events, with the
intensity possibly ramped up by climate change, would spell disaster
for communities on the coast.
Dr
Scott Power, co-author of the report, told Guardian Australia: “If
you look at the major cyclone of 1954, it caused deaths on the Gold
Coast, but only 18,000 people lived there at the time. Now it’s
more like 750,000.
“Weather
prediction is much better now than it was then, but there’s the
potential for absolutely catastrophic impacts if that were to occur
again today. It’s still very sobering to look at the data to see
what has happened as far back as 1860.”
Power
said despite increased understanding of extreme weather impacts, the
number of lives lost from major floods has remained consistent over
the past 150 years, with an average of 2.5 deaths for each event.
“We
are still seeing significant death tolls from these disasters,” he
said. “Population density is certainly a factor in that but it did
make us wonder whether people are just not taking these risks
seriously enough.”
While
several studies on the impact of climate change have indicated no
tangible increase in cyclone frequency, scientists have pointed to a
heightened chance of far more intense storms, escalating the risk of
major damage and loss of life when a cyclone does occur.
“If
you look globally, as a rule of thumb tropical cyclones are expected
to diminish, but the likelihood is that they will be more intense
than they used to be,” Power said.
“The
models suggest that as more water is evaporated due to warming, there
will be more rainfall, which means more rain and winds during
cyclones. That is a robust prediction but we aren’t entirely
confident over the exact magnitude.
“There
is often confusion with people thinking that every single extreme
weather event will increase with climate change. It’s more
complicated than that. We know for example that extremely cold
mornings, which can cause a severe problem for people, will see a
large decrease.”
The
findings were presented at the final day of the Greenhouse 2013
conference in Adelaide on Friday, which also saw research from the
University of New South Wales that showed heatwaves have been
“increasing over much of the Australian continent”.
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