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Floods play a vital role in ecosystems – it's time to get out of their way

The Conversation - Thu, 2016-11-17 14:14

Floods are often seen as a force of destruction. From photographs of crops under water and houses being swamped by swollen rivers, to stories of road, business and public amenity closures, the news during flooding understandably emphasises human loss.

But as river ecologists, we find it hard not to see the positive side of flooding. Why? Because although floods cause destruction, they are also creators, of which we are all beneficiaries.

Floods as destroyers

Rivers have played pivotal roles in most civilisations throughout human history due to the universal need for drinking water and other resources like food. Rivers feature in the mythology, religion, philosophy and culture of so many societies and also play political roles, acting as borders between tribes, states and nations.

Virtually all of the world’s major cities were founded on soils made fertile by flooding. In fact, floods – and the fertility that they bring - have been one of the most important reasons why human societies exist where they do today.

But despite their benefits to humans, rivers also bring death and destruction. In terms of lives lost, the top two worst natural disasters on record are floods.

The worst was in 1931, when at least 4 million people died and almost 30 million people were affected by floods in China.

In the United States, the Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 affected about 630,000 people and covered an area of almost 70,000 square kilometres. That flood’s destructive power was exacerbated by the failure of levees, as has commonly happened elsewhere.

By contrast, death tolls from Australian floods have been comparatively light. Purportedly the most lethal flood in Australia’s history was the 1852 Gundagai flood, which claimed almost 90 lives. Many drowned because the town was previously built on the lowland flood plain of the Murrumbidgee River.

Deaths and destruction occur to the extent they do because of our desire to live in the very areas that are most prone to flooding. But with living on flood plains comes risk, and sooner or later, a big flood will come.

Floods as creators

Generally, rivers flood every one to two years. It is just what they do. The reason is because of the interaction of geology, geomorphology and climate.

When rivers flood, water moves out onto the flood plain. But so does sediment and a lot of organic matter, nitrogen and phosphorus - the energy and materials that fuel river ecosystems and productive farm land. There is in fact mutual exchange of these rich materials between rivers and flood plains, which is why river flats are valued so much by farmers, and often why these areas became permanent settlements.

Some fish and other animals move backwards and forwards between the main channel and flood plain too, but all benefit from the rich materials transported by flooding.

Nature over nurture

In our ambition, we think that we can live on and exploit flood plains through controlling flooding. But this has been shown time and time again to be deluded.

Since the industrial revolution, vastly ambitious and expensive engineering projects around the world have sought to separate rivers from their flood plains, to reclaim land on which to build houses or to farm, and to prevent flooding. In most cases, levees have been built to effectively raise the level of river banks.

Levees have been constructed to separate rivers from their flood plains. Bidgee/Wikimedia, CC BY-SA

While these reduce the incidence of minor floods in some areas, they mostly fail to stop the major ones, and generally make flooding much worse in areas downstream.

Flood damage in the European Union from 2000-12, for example, cost an average US$6.8 billion a year, despite the extensive networks of levees designed to prevent flooding. Similar networks of dams and levees are ineffective at preventing large-scale flooding in Australia. Climate change is set to make the costs even higher.

Going with the flow

If we’ve learned anything from floods, it is that trying to prevent flooding, especially the big ones, is enormously expensive, rarely works and causes ecological and socio-economic damage. There are, however, ways in which people can live and enjoy the benefits of rivers without causing damage.

For example, the Yolo Bypass in Sacramento, California is a clever way of harnessing the floodplain’s capacity to buffer the effects of flooding, rather than trying to prevent flooding in the first place. The bypass, built in the 1930s, transports a large percentage of high flows away from the city, and into a reconnected flood plain. The flood plain is, during non-flood periods, used for agriculture and other activities.

The Yolo Bypass is California is one way of harnessing floodwater for good. Mwehman/Wikimedia, CC BY-SA

Researchers argue that there are many human uses consistent with periodic flooding, such as the growing of pasture and timber, but building infrastructure on flood plains is not one of them.

Solutions such as these are far less costly than trying to prevent flooding and mopping up after inevitable failure. But of course, this requires a transformation in thinking when planning the design of towns and in developing flexible agricultural practices.

Floods are reminders that nature can be both creator and destroyer. Herodotus referred to Egypt as “the gift of the Nile”. It would be wise of us to view our own flood plains in the same way: that they are the gift of our rivers.

We should learn to accept that there will be times when the landscape on which we live, farm or play is reclaimed by the river that created it. On the flipside, we can rejoice when the river spends its time confined to its banks, and make hay while the sun shines.

The Conversation

The authors do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond the academic appointment above.

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RSPB hails 'remarkable' recovery of threatened cirl bunting

BBC - Thu, 2016-11-17 13:17
One of the UK's most endangered songbirds is no longer on the brink of extinction, the RSPB says.
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2016 Telstra Business Women’s Entrepreneur of the Year

RenewEconomy - Thu, 2016-11-17 13:11
Jenny Paradiso was last night named the 2016 Australian Telstra Business Women’s Entrepreneur of the Year award.
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Impact Investment Group adds nu-tility to renewables investment portfolio

RenewEconomy - Thu, 2016-11-17 12:56
Impact Investment Group has backed Australian start-up nu-tility, becoming a major shareholder in Australia’s first fully integrated energy solutions provider.
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Climate advocates get a huge donation Trump bump

RenewEconomy - Thu, 2016-11-17 12:47
NGOs gearing up to battle Trump on a host of issues, including climate change, may have more public support than ever.
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JinkoSolar grows Q3 revenue 39% YoY, ups 2016 guidance

RenewEconomy - Thu, 2016-11-17 12:45
JinkoSolar has posted a set of strong Q3 financials that serve to highlight the current challenges facing the solar industry.
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Climate deniers linked with Trump’s EPA pick booted from COP22 talks

RenewEconomy - Thu, 2016-11-17 12:43
Climate denier Marc Morano got himself kicked out of UN climate talks in Marrakech. But something about the incident was not right.
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Sydney CBD 520kW solar array opens for public investment

RenewEconomy - Thu, 2016-11-17 12:27
Sydney Renewable Power Company is offering 519 unlisted shares to community and retail investors keen to invest in a 520kW solar array on Sydney’s new International Convention Centre.
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Enova reaches major milestone, looks to expand and try peer to peer trading

RenewEconomy - Thu, 2016-11-17 12:24
High solar tariff helps Australia's first community-owned retailer reach major milestone, as it plans geographic expansion and push into new concepts such as peer-to-peer trading.g
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China tells Trump – no climate conspiracy here

RenewEconomy - Thu, 2016-11-17 12:08
As the world awaits Trump's call on Paris, China answer's his 2012 claim that climate change is a Big Chinese Hoax.
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Mayan 'nesting doll pyramid' discovered in Mexico

BBC - Thu, 2016-11-17 12:03
A third structure is found within the famous Kukulkan pyramid in eastern Mexico, experts say.
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Australia named and shamed for “unambitious, uninspired” climate policies

RenewEconomy - Thu, 2016-11-17 11:29
Two international reports name Australia among a small number of G20 nations whose climate change efforts are falling well short of other countries.
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Australia lobbies for Adani coal mine at climate talks

RenewEconomy - Thu, 2016-11-17 11:20
Australia earns "fossil of the day" award in Marrakech after using climate talks to lobby for Adani coal mine. ACT, meanwhile, calls for coal moratorium.
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Australia says it will reduce methane emissions despite coal seam gas and LNG expansion

The Guardian - Thu, 2016-11-17 11:18

Marrakech communique commits countries including Australia to reducing emissions from the oil and gas industry

Australia has signed an international agreement committing to reducing methane emissions from the oil and gas industry, and calling for other countries to do the same, sparking claims it is being hypocritical and could “seriously damage our reputation in climate talks”.

The Marrakech communique, signed this week at the first meeting of parties to the Paris agreement in Morocco, commits a coalition of countries including Australia to take measures to reduce methane emissions in the oil and gas industry.

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Australia ranked among worst developed countries for climate change action

The Guardian - Thu, 2016-11-17 10:01

Two reports place the country near the bottom of the league for emissions level, use of renewables and action to combat global warming

Australia has been singled out again as a climate laggard, being ranked fifth-worst for emissions and policies among developed countries and among the six worst countries in the G20 when it comes to climate action.

In the climate change performance index, released overnight at the UN climate talks in Marrakech, Australia comes ahead of only Kazakhstan, South Korea, Japan and Saudi Arabia.

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Marrakech COP22: IEA issues a Paris reality check

RenewEconomy - Thu, 2016-11-17 09:25
In its first World Energy Outlook since Paris, the International Energy Agency makes clear that commitments to the pact equal near full decarbonisation of energy around 2040 – and that means Australia, too.
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JinkoSolar completes sale of Jinko Power downstream business in China

RenewEconomy - Thu, 2016-11-17 09:06
JinkoSolar today announced the completion of the sale of all of the 55% equity interest it indirectly held in Jiangxi JinkoSolar Engineering Co
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Jinko Solar’s PV modules are 100% in compliance with IEC62804 double 85 anti-PID Standards

RenewEconomy - Thu, 2016-11-17 09:00
Jinko Solar’s PV modules are 100% in compliance with IEC62804 double 85 anti-PID Standards.
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Australia dubbed 'fossil of the day' after lobbying for coal mine at climate talks

The Guardian - Thu, 2016-11-17 07:57

Energy minister Josh Frydenberg raises concern with American counterpart over US activists seeking to stop Adani’s giant Carmichael coalmine

Australia has used a summit on reducing greenhouse gas emissions to lobby the US energy minister in support of the development of one of the world’s largest coalmines.

The move, by the Australian environment and energy minister, Josh Frydenberg, at the Marrekech meeting, won Australia the “fossil of the day” award, announced daily by the Climate Action Network to the countries that perform the worst at UN climate talks.

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Illegal wildlife poaching reaches unprecedented levels

ABC Environment - Thu, 2016-11-17 07:53
A new report has found illegal poaching and trafficking of wildlife continues to rise as Asian demand reaches new heights.
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