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Sunshine Coast Flooding and Climate Risk: What Residents Need to Know
River flooding and coastal erosion represent the primary climate hazards for an expanding population.
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River flooding and coastal erosion represent the primary climate hazards for an expanding population.
The Sunshine Coast's river system, including the Maroochy, Mooloolah, and Noosa Rivers, provides the coastal lowlands with their characteristic landscape but also their primary flood risk. Major flood events in 2011 and 2022 inundated significant residential areas and caused economic damage that prompted substantive investment in flood mitigation infrastructure, including levee systems in Nambour and Bli Bli.
Council's flood mapping program has been updated to incorporate sea level rise projections that materially affect the risk profiles of coastal and estuarine properties. Properties that were considered above flood inundation thresholds under historical modelling appear in revised planning overlays that will affect development approvals and potentially insurance assessments for existing buildings.
Coastal erosion at several Sunshine Coast beaches has accelerated under the combination of reduced sediment supply and increased storm frequency that climate projections associate with warming ocean temperatures. Beach nourishment programs provide short-term management of erosion hotspots, but planners acknowledge these are maintenance interventions rather than structural solutions.
Residents can access Council's updated flood mapping tools online, overlaying their property address against current flood overlay data and comparing with historical event records. Insurance brokers operating in the region have noted significant variation in premiums between properties on the same street depending on ground level and proximity to waterways.
This article was compiled by AI from the sources linked above and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.
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Published by The Daily Sunshine Coast
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