Saturday 30 January 2010

Here comes the flood

Cost of UK flood protection doubles to £1bn a year

Latest data from the Environment Agency shows that more than half a million UK homes are at 'significant' risk of flooding

View from Tewkesbury

The devastating floods of summer 2007 which affected Tewkesbury cost a total of £3.2bn according to the EA. Photograph: Matt Cardy/Getty

More than half a million homes are at "significant" risk of flooding and the cost of protecting them will double to £1bn a year by 2035, according to the latest data from the Environment Agency (EA).

The rising costs will be incurred from the impacts of climate change that will take effect in the coming decades, meaning the risks to homes and communities will increase unless defences are improved.

FloodLondon


The costs of dealing with floods can run into the billions - the devastating floods of summer 2007 cost a total of £3.2bn according to the EA, including more than £2bn in costs to homeowners and businesses as well as 400,000 of lost school days. The EA estimates that 5 million people live and work in the 2.4m properties in England that are at some risk of flooding and, at present, around £570m is spent every year building and maintaining the defences required for them. Half a million of those properties are in highest risk band, which means they are at risk of flooding due to extreme weather expected once every 75 years.

Climate scientists predict that, by the 2080s, sea levels could be around 70cm higher around the southern parts of the UK, making serious storm surges and floods more frequent. Using predictions from the UK Climate Impacts Programme, the EA estimates that keeping all 2.4m at-risk homes at the existing level of flood risk for the next 25 years will cost £1bn per year by 2035. "Assuming that no new properties are adding to that risk, then that investment is to maintain the existing infrastructure and to invest to make sure it isn't worsened, taking into account the uncertainties of climate change," said Robert Runcie, the EA's director of flood and coastal risk management.

"What we know from the science of climate change is that weather patterns are going to become more extreme. The risk is going to get greater and we need to up our game in response to that," said Chris Smith, the EA chairman, in an evidence session to the House of Commons environmental audit committee (EAC) last week.

"The case for flood defence is very strong. The cost benefit of any flood defence work that we do, the benefit is at least five times the cost. The average cost to a home of being flooded is £20,000 to £30,000. The average cost to a home of being burgled is about £1000. So the damage that flooding does in terms of its impact on people's livelihoods is huge."

But getting this money out of government has proved difficult. "The Treasury have crawled all over our figures and have agreed that our working is absolutely in order and have agreed with the conclusions that we have reached," said Smith. "What they have not done, of course, is commit the actual figures and that is unlikely to happen this side of an election or, I suspect, the other."

An Treasury spokeswoman said:"The government will make decisions about the allocation of expenditure, including the allocation for flood risk management, at the next spending review." She pointed out that spending on on flood and coastal erosion risk management had increased in recent years, from £394m in 2002-03 to £564m in 2005-06.

Not spending the money could have even bigger consequences. The EA estimates that the annual cost of damage to residential and commercial property from flooding in England could rise from £2.5bn to £4bn by 2035 without the extra cash for flood defences. Investing the money would save England some £180bn over the next 100 years.

"Even at a time of unprecedented financial pressure, this is something that has to be given a priority," said EAC chair and Conservative MP Tim Yeo. "We could be more creative about getting private sector investment in as well. Where you've got new developments taking place, it's quite legitimate in my view for the planning authority to say, look, although what we're going to ask for [in flood defences] is not directly related to the houses or supermarket you're putting up there, it is of concern to this community and we do need to accelerate investment in flood-prevention measures so we want to supplement what the taxpayer is being asked for with developer contributions."

Runcie said that flood management in future would depend on careful planning and preventing the construction of new buildings on flood plains. "One of the things that's made a huge difference on that is a change to the planning laws where, only last year, we became a formal consultee. In the last 12 months, of the thousands of applications for major developments that have been proposed, only 4% went against our recommendations."

Monday 25 January 2010

Your motivation

Dear Sir or Madam,

I have been given a simple, easy task: To write a letter of motivation. How do I begin?
Brainstorm!

I the past I was extremely lazy. I did love blowing up tall buildings though, so it seemd a good idea for me to consider a career in destroying things. My mother always got angry when I set fire to the sofa. Maybe I should think about a career in the fireworks industry.

Now I am studying pyrotechnics. I really enjoy setting fireworks to music and am learning to combine DMX systems with the fireworks. It's great fun!

In the future i want to start up a business organising firework dance party events. If I get the chance I will organise the biggest party ever seen, using the latest automation technologies to achieve this.

I look forward to receiving your reply.

Yours faithfully,

Saturday 23 January 2010

The environmental impact of emails


How about the concept of a focusing on the carbon equivalent for IT services such as email? I like the idea of green IT. Efficiency across the board is a concept that most people have never thought about. Getting the message across in an efficient way reduces our impact on the environment. Think about a round robin email with a large file attachment. The logically efficient way would be to put the attachment on a server and refer others to it. The costs in terms of carbon can be compared and displayed. One day a carbon allowance will need to be introduced. Everyone, including businesses will be able to buy and sell carbon credits. Why not include emails into this?


Friday 22 January 2010

Extinction and alien invaders

An article just appeared in The Guardian about invasive species. It motivated me to write this:

This has been happening since man started moving around with their germs & domesticated crops & animals. What's new is the rate of the invasion.

Fact 1: This is irreversible.
Fact 2: eradication may and often does backfire. Our understanding of ecosystems is inadequate.
Fact 3: We are responsible for initiating a mass extinction on this planet due to our ignorance.

Even now we continue to perpetrate this disaster and globalisation has truly opened up the disaster market. As someone else pointed out, climate change is adding to the stress, not only on the species level, but also on the ecosystem level.

So live with it folks. England's green and pleasant land will look quite different in the future. And invasive species like Japanese knotweed, Himalayan balsam, or giant hogweed are only the first ambassadors of change.

The eel is almost certainly gone from British rivers as yesterday'S Guardian reported. Aggressive Chinese mitten crabs and signal crayfish have invaded our rivers (at least you can BBQ the crayfish). I imagine the Nile perch is not far away from gobbling up what's left of our indigenous fish.

That's the tragedy. Ecosystems are being pushed into extremes where only the toughest, pollution resistant species can survive.

Some invaders fill new niches, such as the parakeets that are now at home in many cities, but others like the rabbit have wrought destruction in Australia.

One thing is for sure: Homo sapiens have made a right mess of things in the paradise we evolved in.


And in reply to another poster here:

fishsnorkel 22 Jan 2010, 11:32AM
Yes, we're the cause, but if it wasn't us, it would be something else.
But what else could cause all this damage? This mentality is frighteningly similar to that of the opportunistic thief: "Well it was just asking for me to steal it. If I hadn't someone else would." You might be intersted in the concept of anthropogenic extinction. Others talk about the Holocene Extinction: scientists estimate that during the 20th century, between 20,000 and two million species actually became extinct, but the precise total cannot be determined more accurately within the limits of present knowledge. Up to 140,000 species per year (based on Species-area theory) may be the present rate of extinction based upon upper bound estimating. Personally I prefer the term Anthropocene, which describes the period we are now in, which is rapidly changing the face of the earth due to the effects of our activities on the planet. Wake up and smell the roses, or the balsam, whichever is going in your garden now.

Monday 18 January 2010

New Greenpeace ship!!!

This came as great news.

Greenpeace to build £14m flagship

The Rainbow Warrior III mega-yacht will be one of the greenest ships afloat, complete with satellite video system and a helipad

It's great to see this happening. The Greenpeace ships are the most visible and symbolic part of Greenpeace worldwide.

And don't forget, Greenpeace began on sailing yachts in their campaign to stop nuclear testing at sea. The original Rainbow Warrior was bombed by French secret agents in Aukland harbour and is now an artificial reef.

The money that Greenpeace received from the French enabled the conversion of what became the Rainbow Warrior II, a 500 tonne ship with a heart (and an appetite to match).

Now is the time for the replacement for the Rainbow Warrior II. Like the MV Greenpeace (my favourite GP ship and one which remains anchored in my memory) the Warrior was extensively refitted. The same is true with theEsperanza and the original Beluga, an ex- fire ship.

Now Greenpeace has the Beluga II, also a sailing ship and a fine coastal cruiser with a sailing rig that can be lowered for inland work.

I look forward to the realisation of a truly green ship and wish her success in her many missions.

Luxury cruise liner docks in Haiti

Jet skis, BBQ steak and cocktails on a private beach in a disaster zone? No problem. Just make sure the locals don't get past the armed guards.

The world has become global so a disaster like this is now in your face and whether you like it or not we are connected.

Remember the sick feeling we all must have felt when the tsunami struck on Boxing day? Kind of put things into perspective.

It's not as though we weren't aware of the plight of many in this poor country. Jared Diamond wrote clearly in his book Collapse about the poverty and corruption they face. A disaster like this has made it transparent and now it is a gaping wound for all of us to stare at, not just the rich on their luxury liners.

And as for tourists feeding local incomes, nothing on earth could buy a place on a lifeboat as the Titanic sank. Haitians are now dying and will kill for food and water. That is the crime here. Whilst people are in desperate need of the very basics, money cannot help, its food. water, a roof over their heads, sanitation and communications that are required.

And this ship has plenty of all these things. It's wrong just to say that a trickle of money will help at all. How does it look to desperate locals when they look over the fence and the decadent rich?


Original article that set me off:


http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/jan/17/cruise-ships-haiti-earthquake

Sunday 17 January 2010

Haiti

This morning the death toll rose to an estimated 200,000 lives lost. So far...

This could rise dramatically if aid does not reach those worst affected. Rioting, followed by a compete breakdown of society could well ensue.

Now is the time to reach deep into our pockets. Donate to an NGO. My choice was the German Red Cross, but the choice is yours.

International Committee of the Red Cross:






Friday 15 January 2010

Death of the Nile

A shocking new documentary shows the death of one of the world's greatest rivers.

Join International Rivers in the fight to save our rivers.

In Britain, the campaign group Thamesbank are working to bring the Thames back to life.

Get active and join them.

Thursday 14 January 2010

Bluecloud's blog is born

Well it had to happen sooner, or later. Bluecloud's blog.

Here is a collection of comments, most of which I, Bluecloud have made on The Guardian newspaper over the last five years, or so.

In total I have penned over 4, 220 comments in that time. I have been mentioned in articles a number of times and am currently drafting an article I hope will get published in their esteemed newspaper. We shall see...