Thursday, 12 July 2012

England flood risk to rise fourfold by 2035-report


* More investment, better planning of new housing needed

* Water scarcity likely to become more common (Adds UK government reaction, detail on UK flooding)










An article by Nina Chestney from reuters on Wednesday July 11 2012 says that the risk of flooding for many English homes and businesses could increase fourfold by 2035 if more action to deal with the impact of climate change is not taken, government advisers said on Wednesday.
As severe floods continue to batter parts of Britain after the wettest June since records began, around one in seven homes and businesses face some kind of flood risk, the climate advisers said.
Around 160,000 properties would be at risk by 2035 if better planning and more investment was made in flood defences, compared with 610,000 at risk if no action was taken, they said.
The cost of protecting more than half a million homes at risk of flooding will double to 1 billion pounds a year by 2035, according to estimates by the UK's Environment Agency in 2010.
The devastating floods of 2007 caused damage to homes and businesses, infrastructure and services, and resulted in lost work and school days, which cost the UK economy 3.2 billion pounds.
"We must take adaptation more seriously if we are to manage the growing risks of floods and droughts," said John Krebs, the chairman of the climate change advisory panel.
"This can be done by investing more in flood defences, faster rollout of water meters and giving serious consideration to where and how we build our housing and infrastructure," he said in a statement.
"Without action by households and businesses to prepare for these inevitable weather extremes the country faces rising costs, unnecessary damage and future disruption."
Scientists believe extreme weather like heatwaves, floods and droughts are linked to climate change and likely to become more frequent in the future.
Flooding will be the biggest climate risk to Britain this century with damage set to cost as much as 12 billion pounds ($18.63 billion) a year by the 2080s if nothing is done to adapt to extreme weather, a government-funded study said in January.
Since the start of May this year, over 3,000 properties have been flooded, 55,000 have received flood warnings and 31,000 were protected by flood defences, according to the UK's Environment Agency.

FUNDING
The government's advisers said in a report that property development in flood plains - or areas along streams or rivers that are likely to experience repeated flooding - has increased by 12 percent over the past 10 years compared with a 7 percent rise in other parts of England.
Public and private funding for flood defences is falling and is 12 percent lower for the current government spending period compared with the previous one, after inflation.
However, the UK's Environment Agency estimates that funding needs to increase by 20 million pounds a year on top of inflation to keep pace with climate change.
"We are spending more than 2.17 billion pounds over four years to protect people from flooding and our successful partnership funding model will draw in around an additional 72 million pounds," said a spokesman from the Department of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs in response to the report.
"The money for flood defences is being spent more effectively than ever before and we now expect to exceed our target to better protect another 145,000 homes by 2015."
Apart from increased flooding risks, water scarcity is also likely to become more common in parts of the country due to climate change and population growth, the panel said.
Water scarcity is likely to be made worse by household consumption levels which are among the highest in north-west Europe.
Encouraging households to save water could cut total consumption by 700 million litres a day, which is two thirds more than is currently saved under initiatives by water companies, according to the report.
The government should take further steps to increase water efficiency through water metering and pricing, it added. ($1 = 0.6442 British pounds) (Editing by David Cowell and Alison Birrane) 

Wed, 11 Jul 2012 10:32 GMT

Source: Reuters // Reuters

Sunday, 8 July 2012

Haiti Earthquake

In January 2010 an earthquake destroyed Port au Prince in Haiti.










































That was 2010 - this is 2012...



Heat kills thousands of fish


Thousands of fish are dying in lakes and rivers across the US in the stifling heat. The excessive heat throughout June and July is reducing the amount of oxygen in the waters and therefore resulting in fish deaths. The picture shows some of the 10,000 bluegills that have died in Knoxville, Tennessee. 

The stench of rotting fish is "really putrid' Paula Gumpman, a local resident told the Knoxville News Sentinel. "It's like after a hurricane. Gooky and yucky."
  
















A reservoir in Noblesville, Indiana.





Thursday, 5 July 2012

Research Questions


In a recent publication by Paul Gilding, The Great Disruption (2011) he stated that “science says we have physically entered a period of great change, a synchronized, related crash of the economy and the ecosystem, with food shortages, climate catastrophes, massive economic change, and global geopolitical instability. It has been forecast for decades and the moment has now arrived.” 

There is no doubt that the current myriad of landscape traumas, whether in the guise of economic, environmental, political, climate or social crisis are resulting in destabilized global and local environments. Hurricanes, conflict, floods, unemployment, full landfill sites, rising fuel costs, shop closures, housing repossessions etc all have detrimental impacts on our landscape, environment and ultimately quality of life, now and for future generations. Whilst it all indicates towards a depressing future, out of crisis comes opportunity.

“We are all faced with a series of great opportunities brilliantly disguised as impossible situations.” 
Charles R. Swindoll, 1934

Crisis could be seen as the catalyst for a new approach towards rural and urban design, with the role of landscape architecture at the forefront. Landscapes are operating in new destabilized conditions, where increasingly extreme and unpredictable elements are interacting with our environments. Landscapes are emerging out of disaster and more resilient and adaptable approaches are required to ensure that sustainable futures are achieved.

This thesis intends to explore what landscapes are emerging out of crisis and the role of landscape architecture in achieving more stable economic, environmental and social conditions.

The thesis will investigate responses to landscapes in crisis and the challenges that they bring. A crisis instigates a need for a greater understanding of the landscape and an increased awareness of the environmental impacts we place upon it. From this position of greater understanding how can we re-evaluate and re-approach post traumatic landscapes to give them a value and identify what new relationships and systems may emerge as a consequence. 


Wednesday, 4 July 2012