NZ Govt
dismisses warning of rising sea level
English
says threat ‘speculative’ and impact uncertain
20
November, 2015
The
Government has dismissed one of the key recommendations in a report
on rising sea levels despite a warning that 9000 homes around New
Zealand are sitting precariously close to the high water mark.
Parliamentary
Commissioner for the Environment Jan Wright took the rare step of
making a specific warning to the Finance Minister in her latest
report on the threat of rising oceans driven by climate change.
The
commissioner said the Government needed to start preparing for the
huge potential cost of higher sea levels, which could lead to damage
of between $3 billion and $20 billion in replacing buildings alone.
Finance
Minister Bill English immediately said he would not be taking up the
recommendation. Sea level rises were just one of several risks, he
said, and would not specifically be factored into the Government's
planning decisions about infrastructure.
He
described the commissioner's findings as "speculative" and
said there were still many uncertainties about the potential impacts
of rising oceans.
In
her report, Parliament's environmental watchdog concluded that
central and local government needed to completely overhaul the way
they were preparing for rising sea levels.
"Continuing
sea level rise is not something that might happen - it is already
happening, will accelerate, and will continue for the indefinite
future," Dr Wright said.
A
total of 9000 homes were less than 50cm above spring high tides.
Thousands more were within 1m of this threshold.
Of
the major cities, Auckland and Wellington had relatively few homes in
low-lying areas.
But
Christchurch had nearly 1000 just above the spring high tide mark,
and Dunedin had 2600 within the 50cm threshold.
Five
coastal towns - Napier, Whakatane, Tauranga, Motueka and Nelson - had
more than 1000 homes between zero and 150cm above the high water
mark.
The
report predicted sea level rise of 30cm over the next 50 years in New
Zealand.
That
would mean 1-in-100 year flooding events would become annual events
in Christchurch, and four-yearly in Auckland.
The
report said sea level rise was caused by warming, expanding oceans,
the retreat of glaciers, and shrinking polar ice sheets.
The
most difficult aspect of preparing for higher seas would be dealing
with New Zealanders' coastal properties.
Dr
Wright said councils would need to use science fit for purpose, and
engage with communities "in a measured way and with empathy".
The
process in Kapiti and Christchurch had been particularly
"adversarial", she said, as local government had clashed
with residents over plans to prepare for higher sea levels. Councils
also needed better direction from central government.
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