robl wrote:...they have just finished spillway work in the last few years to prevent wall failure for 1 in 700 year floods
robl wrote:Perhaps the extra 14m will only be used for flood mitigation in that rare 1 in 500 year flood and will only be needed for a day or so.
Is the capacity going to be increased? My reading is that it is for flood mitigation only.
Interestingly they have just finished spillway work in the last few years to prevent wall failure for 1 in 700 year floods. (if I remember correctly.)
The Hawkesbury-Nepean Valley between Penrith and Sackville has the greatest flood risk of anywhere in NSW.
The government says up to 134,000 people who live and work there could require evacuation in the event of a large flood – a figure forecast to double in the next 30 years.
In 2012, Infrastructure NSW said a study it commissioned found that a one-in-1000-year flood in the area similar to the 2011 Queensland flood would cause damage estimated at $8 billion.
This included potentially putting 43,000 residents and 9000 local employees at risk, destroying 6500 homes and flooding 14,000 homes above floor level.
GPSGuided wrote:What's the ASL for Kowmung/Coxes junction and what's the ASL of said dam?
This article has more convincing information.
http://www.dontraisethedam.com/raising- ... hwalker-38
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ribuck wrote:robl wrote:...they have just finished spillway work in the last few years to prevent wall failure for 1 in 700 year floods
Does this mean that each year there is a one-in-701 chance that the dam will fail? Are there any statisticians here who can interpret this?
gayet wrote:What about moving the people etc out of the flood prone areas? Do it once and the problem is solved. Can't be more expensive than raising dam walls and potentially stuffing up other river systems up stream of the wall.
Why does a bad decision years ago take precedence over a solution now? Yes the people being moved may not like it, but they generally don't like the impacts of a flood either. Sometimes, human feelings should not come first.
ribuck wrote:We are talking about a once-in-decades occurrence, so people within the flood plain can't reasonably expect not to be inconvenienced to some extent.
Then, we can re-draw the "3km from stored water" prohibited area. This will expand our bushwalking options ..........
gayet wrote:What about moving the people etc out of the flood prone areas? Do it once and the problem is solved.
.... whole towns have been moved to facilitate the Snowy Hydro program ....
Grabeach wrote:.... whole towns have been moved to facilitate the Snowy Hydro program ....
The Snowy Scheme relocated about 1,000 people living in small easily movable wooden houses to unlimited land nearby. Not quite the same as 134,000 living in larger (many brick on slab?) houses in Sydney.
So your saying it can't be done, is that right.
Giddy_up wrote:Grabeach wrote:.... whole towns have been moved to facilitate the Snowy Hydro program ....
The Snowy Scheme relocated about 1,000 people living in small easily movable wooden houses to unlimited land nearby. Not quite the same as 134,000 living in larger (many brick on slab?) houses in Sydney.
So your saying it can't be done, is that right.
Giddy_up wrote:I wonder if any of the traditional land owners have been consulted about this and if any of their sites of significance would be lost!
DarrenM wrote:Giddy_up wrote:Grabeach wrote:[quote].... whole towns have been moved to facilitate the Snowy Hydro program ....
The Snowy Scheme relocated about 1,000 people living in small easily movable wooden houses to unlimited land nearby. Not quite the same as 134,000 living in larger (many brick on slab?) houses in Sydney.
So your saying it can't be done, is that right.
Giddy_up wrote:I wonder if any of the traditional land owners have been consulted about this and if any of their sites of significance would be lost!
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