“Many communities experience repeated disruptions from flood, cyclone and fire events. Some of these events are
unforeseen and the damage is unavoidable, but in many cases the consequences of natural disasters could be mitigated.â€
This quote is part of an inquiry launched by Joe Hockey and being undertaken by the Australian Productivity Commission (APC) into how taxpayer dollars could be better used in managing natural disasters.
The main concern is that most of that funding is being used to pick up the pieces after disasters rather than on mitigation steps to minimise the damage.
The APC’s inquiry invited submissions and CCPA-Wooli responded. The highlights of our submission are that :
– coastal erosion and inundation should be recognised as an emerging type of disaster, which, if forecasts are correct, could steadily become a major long term problem around the whole of Australia ‘s coastline;
– beach nourishment using offshore sand sources is a viable mitigation strategy to effectively prevent or at least greatly reduce the impact of this type of disaster;
– a funding model based on a Public Private Partnership approach would make this strategy sustainable indefinitely.
Click on this link to read Our Submission. Its quite brief and we’d appreciate your feedback.
As you’ll see it draws information from a research paper by Mr Angus Gordon, an experienced coastal engineer and member of the NSW Coastal Expert Panel.

The title of this article is part of a recent quote from Brad Hazzard, NSW Minister for the Department of Planning and Infrastructure,
has decided to follow State advice and “jump away from the doomsday scenario” in their coastal planning. Unfortunately, as you’ll see in that article Clarence Valley Council (CVC) continues to treat 86-year modelling forecasts as clear-and-present-danger in their Coastal Zone Management Plans, including the one for Wooli beach. Comparing the beach today to the dire forecast in this
Coastal Hotspot communities understand that coastal management is a complex problem for all our councils and one they are struggling to manage as highlighted in this
batteries for another busy year! Having the beach and the river meant we could have the best of everything”, said Emma Norton.
councils and coastal communities alike.
While we understand that the previous state government compelled local councils to use these figures back in 2010, it appears that CVC is reluctant to disregard them when drafting current CZMP ‘s, despite some convincing grounds for doubt informing the debate.
lawyers and local and state government bureaucrats to accept the IPCC predictions to reduce legal risk, and told they could bear personal liability if the council were sued. But Eaton says that, as a lawyer himself, he has carefully analysed the issues and decided the council would still have the defence that it had acted in good faith because the Labor-era requirement to rely on the IPCC guidelines had been scrapped. “We threw out the sea-level rise crap,” Eaton says.