Only last year Queensland authorities were considering lowering the flood prevention buffer at the Wivenhoe Dam — the buffer currently preventing a whole lot more water flowing into Brisbane.
Queensland’s Wivenhoe Dam — built on the Brisbane River, about 80km north of Brisbane — has quite literally been the only thing between a bad situation and a situation that’s a whole lot worse. Experts have praised the dam — which currently sits at 187.8% capacity — for reducing the amount of water surging into the Brisbane River. Due to the quantity of rain, authorities have been forced to release large amounts of water in order to maintain the dam’s flood capacity.
But in 2010, authorities seriously considered “raising operational levels” in the Wivenhoe Dam — that is, removing or reducing the flood buffer — according to the South East Queensland Water Strategy.
The dam has a total storage capacity of 2.6 million megalitres — but it is considered 100% full at 1.15 million megalitres, with any additional water allowed to flow through. This creates a flood buffer of 1.45 million megalitres — the dam holds the extra water and lets it out slowly, stopping or minimising any serious flooding. The Queensland Water Commission stopped short of advocating a reduction in flood mitigation levels, saying that more research would be needed because of Brisbane’s long history of floods.
Wivenhoe was built in 1984, as a direct response to the 1974 record flooding which inundated much of Brisbane. At the time, premier Joh Bjelke-Petersen said the dam would mean the floods of 1974 would never happen again.
In March 2010, the Liberal National Party were calling for the government to stop releasing water from the Wivenhoe, and to conduct an inquiry into whether such a large flood buffer was still needed.
Queensland’s metro consumption, including industry, is about 430,000 megalitres a year. The plan estimates that if the Wivenhoe dam level falls below 40% they will have difficulty meeting this demand. The Wivenhoe spent nearly all of the period from 2005 to 2009 well below 40% capacity.
At the time opposition water spokesman Jeff Sweeney cited a 2005 state government report, which he said showed that 2m of extra storage (and 2m less of flood buffer) would add 228,000 megalitres of drinking water. With the Wivenhoe running above 90% capacity since March, it’s likely that much or all of this increase would have been added to the flood.
Queensland Water Commission acting executive director Dan Spiller responded by saying that more research would be needed and that authorities were preparing for “events much worse than anything on record”. “Flooding and rainfall remain very unpredictable and that is the reason why the dam sensibly contains a buffer for flood mitigation,” he said.
Calls to flood and engineering experts in Queensland were difficult this morning, with many calls failing to get through because of the congested telecommunications network.
When each hefty slab of ice cap slides into the sea, sea levels will rise permanently. It won’t just be Brisbane which finds that its flood waters have nowhere else to go.
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The wake-up call that Brisbane is receiving now may well become the distant early warning that other cities wished they had had.
So all those blaming Anna Bligh can remember that it was the LNP who wanted the mitigation system lowered.
Just imagine if they had got their way.
Surely that is a typo in the spelling the CEO of Qld Water Commission’s name and it ought to be “Dam Spiller”?
Roger Clifton, this is not climate change crap – it is the weather cycle and here in Bribane we have seen it all before 1974 and 1893. Please keep your stupid comments self censored.
Seeney was very enthusiatic about keeping more in the Dam (Qld Hansard, Tuesday, 9 March 2010 ):
[“I believe that it is time to review the comparative uses of the total storage available in Wivenhoe Dam. I believe that more of the total available storage space should be used for water storage so that there is less chance of a water crisis developing in the future……
….Since that original decision was made in 1980, technology available to the dam managers has also advanced considerably. We are now able to forecast and predict the occurrence of rainfall events with much more accuracy and much more reliability than was ever thought possible 30 years ago. In addition, the automatic stream flow monitors and computer flow models allow for much better informed decision making in regard to managing any potential flood events. These advances alone make it possible to attain the same level of flood protection for Brisbane while using less of the available storage area in Wivenhoe Dam as a flood buffer. …
…I believe it would be absurd to release water from Wivenhoe Dam at the current time. It would be absurd to allow any releases until this option is thoroughly investigated. I call on the minister today to ensure that no water is released from Wivenhoe Dam and that serious commitments are made to developing this proposal to increase the storage levels in Wivenhoe Dam….
…It is time the minister got serious about this issue. The Labor government has seriously mismanaged the water issue for many years.” ]
Mmm. Perhaps not such a good idea, Mr Seeney?