The results of the community survey revealed what resident’s value most about the Bundaberg Region coastline and will be used to shape the CHAS. More than 600 residents participated in the survey and the headline findings are:
The top five ways people use the coast:
The top five qualities and characteristics of the coast:
The top five concerns about the coast:
The results from the community values survey will be used to assist to shape the future strategy and manage the risks of coastal hazard by provide guidance and a framework by which adaptation options to coastal hazards will be identified.
The fourth and fifth CRG meetings were held in May and June 2019 where members contributed to developing and validating the complex vulnerability and risk assessment processes as part of Phases 4 and 5 of the CHAS. For example, at the fourth CRG the group provided input to the risk assessment assumptions including looking at the scales of consequence of coastal hazard across a range of scenarios and sea level conditions. At the fifth CRG the group were provided the preliminary results of the coastal hazards risk assessment across the Bundaberg coastal region and consideration was given to acceptance and tolerance levels the community has to coastal hazard risks and how this acceptance or tolerance level may change over time with rising sea level conditions. The group were presented with the priority areas, i.e. those settlements subject to intolerable risks and the sea level scenario that triggers the intolerable risk.
The CRG also provided input to the vision of resilience for the Bundaberg coastal region to understand what the future state for the coastal settlements in terms coastal hazard risk is and how can each adaptation option help to achieve this.
The statements of vision, coupled with the community survey insight will provide the framework for Phase 6 where the project team will discuss potential adaptation options to reduce or maintain risk from coastal hazard.
Step 1. Monitor Sea Level Rise
Step 2. Understand exposure to coastal hazard
Step 3. Choose your adaptation pathway from the Strategy and Action Plan
The CHAS will be used to:
Stakeholder engagement underpinned the development of Bundaberg Coastal Hazard Adaptation Strategy. The Community Reference Group (CRG) was formed to provide input into the development of the Strategy and assist Council to connect the local community to project information.
Throughout all aspects of work the Strategy has utilised a co-design approach wherein the CRG provided local knowledge and information, validated the technical findings and played a crucial role in the shaping of the Strategy document.
All of the CRG meeting minutes are available in our Document Library along with a Stakeholder Communication and Engagement Summary Report of all activities completed during the project.
The effect on coastal water of a storm surge combined with the normally occurring astronomical tide.
Temporary flooding of a portion of land, a localised increase (or decrease) in ocean water levels caused by high winds and reduced atmospheric pressures associated with a storm event.
The loss of land or the removal of beach or dune sediments by wave action, wind action, tidal currents or water flows or permanent inundation due to sea-level rise.
Rise in average sea level that results in permanent inundation of property and infrastructure by sea water. Council measures sea level using the Bureau of Meteorology SEAFRAME stations. The tide gauge at Rosslyn Bay (near Yeppoon) is part of that network and is managed to accurately record sea level change and sea level trends. This data will be used as the sea level rise evidence base for the Bundaberg region.
For more information on sea level rise visit:
www.qld.gov.au/environment/coasts-waterways/plans/hazards/sea-level-mapping
www.stateoftheenvironment.des.qld.gov.au/climate/coasts-and-oceans/sea-level
https://research.csiro.au/slrwavescoast/sea-level
http://www.bom.gov.au/oceanography/projects/abslmp/abslmp.shtml
Actions undertaken to eliminate or limit the risks posed by a coastal hazard.
A system or community’s ability to rapidly accommodate and recover from the impacts of hazards, restore essential and desired functionality, and adapt to new circumstances.
The conditions determined by physical, social, economic and environmental factors or processes, which increase the susceptibility of a community to the impact of hazards.
Combines an understanding of the likelihood of a hazardous event occurring with an assessment of its impact.
The level of risk, sufficiently low that society is comfortable with. Society does not generally consider expenditure in further reducing such risks justifiable or required.
The level of risk that, following an understanding of the likelihood and consequences, is low enough to allow the exposure to continue, and at the same time high enough to require new treatments or actions to reduce risk. Society can live with this risk but believes that, as much as is reasonably practical, steps should be taken to reduce the risk further.
The level of risk that, following an understanding of the likelihood and consequences, is so high that it requires actions to avoid or reduce the risk.
A serious disruption in a community, caused by the impact of an event that requires a significant coordinated response by the State and other entities to help the community to recover from the disruption.
An approach for enabling systematic adjustment of adaptation strategies in response to new information or changing circumstances.
Continue to use the land and maintain the current risk level. These options include ongoing work in the areas of disaster management, land use planning, asset planning and maintenance, and community education and awareness programs. These activities do not remove the risk or the hazard.
Use of physical interventions that modify our settlements where the risk becomes intolerable. These include soft solutions such as beach nourishment and physical options such as raising key access roads to mitigate isolation risks; seawalls or storm surge barriers to protect the land from the sea.
Relocate or withdraw assets that are exposed to intolerable risks, options in this category include tenure transition and land swap. Land Use and Tenure Transition is complex due to high capitalisation of coastal land and is generally only appropriate in certain circumstances when the land value becomes a true reflection of the risk level.
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Phase 1 Plan for life-of-project stakeholder communication and engagement |
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Phase 2 Scoping coastal hazard issues for the area of interest |
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Phase 3 Identify areas exposed to current and future coastal hazards |
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Phase 4 Identify key assets potentially impacted |
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Phase 5 Risk assessment of key assets in coastal hazard areas |
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Phase 6 Identify potential adaptation options |
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Phase 7 Socio-economic appraisal of adaptation options |
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Phase 8 Strategy development, implementation and review |