91色情片

Media contact

Cecilia Duong
91色情片 News & Content
02 9065 1740
cecilia.duong@unsw.edu.au

Earlier this year, New South Wales and Queensland experienced once-in-a-century floods across both states, as extensive rainfall caused damage to property, infrastructure and even claimed human life.

The northern NSW town of Lismore saw 400mm of rain in 24 hours聽which left homes and buildings completely submerged under water and forced communities to evacuate.

While populations around the globe have dealt with the effect of floods for millennia, climate change is bringing bigger and more extreme storms - causing larger flood events.

Engineering hydrologist, Professor Ashish Sharma from 91色情片 Sydney鈥檚 School of Civil and Environmental Engineering, says the problem is due to the fact the climate is changing faster than plans to tackle the issue.

鈥淎 lot has changed in the last 50 years. We have had significant changes in our climate, but the flood infrastructure and warning systems haven鈥檛 caught up yet,鈥 he says.

鈥淭hey have been put in place to expect little to no change - as it used to be in the previous 10, 20, or 30 years.

鈥淎 lot of the infrastructure needs to be redesigned, which will be costly, but the long-term benefits for the next generation are clear. If not, we鈥檙e just going to be faced with the same problem over again.

'鈥楢nd this has been echoed in the Federal election as well, which seems to suggest some specific populations are screaming for more聽support聽in terms of flood resilience and recovery.

鈥淲e can鈥檛 control what comes down from the sky. But once it touches ground, it鈥檚 in our control 鈥 and floods happen because we didn鈥檛 control it early enough.鈥

Lessons learnt from the recent floods

It鈥檚 hard to forget the images of cars floating down roads as rising floodwaters left people stranded on their rooftops.

In Australia, floods are considered to be the most expensive natural disaster - with most forms of flooding occurring along rivers after heavy rainfall.

However, Prof. Sharma says minimising the risk of flooding can be achieved by improving current forecasting systems and the design of infrastructure.

鈥淭he first line of defence is to improve the systems that feed the flood forecast modelling and issue warnings, so that we receive them much further in advance.

鈥淚f we know about the possible weather events sooner, we can act quicker.

鈥淪imilarly, a lot of our infrastructure, such as dams and levees, needs to be redesigned because the floods they鈥檙e supposed to be protecting us from are not the same as they were when they were built.鈥

Prof. Sharma says nature-based solutions, such as green infrastructure, make a difference in our defence against flooding.

鈥淪imple solutions such as green pavements and surfaces might not reduce the impact of a severe flooding event, like the one we had recently, but it can act as a buffer for the smaller flooding events that impact livelihoods.鈥

Warragamba Dam

Warragamba Dam is the primary reservoir for water supply for the city of Sydney. When the dam reaches full capacity during periods of heavy rainfall, water is released and flows down the Warragamba River into the Hawkesbury-Nepean River. Photo: Shutterstock

Two sides of the story

A found that global water supplies are shrinking, even as rainfall is intensifying 鈥 and the culprit is the drying of soil.

It鈥檚 important to recognise these changes in climate are causing two different types of flood impacts, says Prof. Sharma.

鈥淥n one end we are seeing much more extreme floods and our old infrastructure, which has been designed on the assumption the floods would be the same size as they were many years ago, can鈥檛 cope with it,鈥 he says.

鈥淎t the same time, we are also experiencing higher temperatures which causes greater evaporation and as a result, we are seeing drier soils.

鈥淪o, on the other end, we are also seeing smaller floods from less extreme rainfalls because the storms are falling on drier soil.

鈥淭hese catchments were more moist before a storm event 鈥 allowing excess rainfall to run off into rivers 鈥 they are now drier and soak up more of the rain, so less water makes it as flow. While these less extreme storms create a smaller flood event, it also creates water insecurity as it is such frequent floods that fill our dams.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a two-fold change.鈥

More money, less problems

Australia is no little fish in the water space. But despite being a global leader in water resources and management, Prof. Sharma says the nation is lagging in research support.

He believes there is a false perception that the field is overflowing with resources.

鈥淔lood and water infrastructure are the biggest and the costliest infrastructure assets we have on the planet,鈥 he says.

鈥淚f you count the number of water supply systems, water distribution systems, levees, canals, desalination plants, urban distribution systems on this planet, it will show that we spend most of our money to ensure two things: sufficient water supply and safety from flooding.

鈥淒espite this, research support is close to negligible. There is this false perception that we have the right infrastructure in place and there is no need to do any more research in this area.

鈥淚n a country that is facing natural disaster after natural disaster, year after year, it鈥檚 clear we need well thought out solutions to mitigate the impact of the next disaster.

鈥淲e need the Government to back the research and legislate the solutions because ultimately it鈥檚 the community who suffers unless better flood management practices are enforced.鈥