
Environmentalists and residents of flood-prone areas of Western聽Sydney are angry with New South Wales Premier Dominic Perrottet鈥檚 October聽6 decision to raise the Warragamba Dam wall.
They see the 聽and First Nations culture and point to聽evidence that a higher wall will not protect residents from flooding.
Perrottet declared Warragamba Dam to be 鈥溾 (SSI) on October 5, allowing the government to bypass normal planning processes. He said that raising the wall would 鈥渇uture proof鈥 Western Sydney.
Professor Jamie Pittock of the Australian National University said in March that flood control capacity of dams is 鈥渓imited鈥. He pointed to the Brisbane homes being flooded 鈥渄espite having one of Australia鈥檚 biggest flood control dams upstream鈥.
He said the for 134,000 more people to live on the already over-populated floodplains.
Dangerous flooding in the Hawkesbury-Nepean Valley of Western Sydney was聽noted as far back as 1817 by Governor Lachlan Macquarie.
鈥淭he valley now presents a high risk to 70,000 residents as physical choke points along the river channel, such as the Sackville Gorge, bank up and slow the discharge of large floods to the sea,鈥澛燩ittock said.
鈥淚n modern Australia we expect our governments to apply expert knowledge in regulations and other programs to reduce excessive danger to citizens but such good governance has been lacking in the valley.鈥
He said if the NSW government is really concerned about flood risk 鈥渋t should limit further development in harm鈥檚 way on the floodplain鈥.
He said evacuation roads in Western Sydney needed to be upgraded so that residents can flee safely. 鈥淎s we saw 鈥 evacuation roads are being cut long before major floods hit.鈥
Western Sydney resident Gendy Parry-Okeden, who lives on farmland in the low-lying part of the region, said the groundswell of anger is turning a Liberal stronghold away from the party.
鈥淲e have to ask the question, why is he [Perrottet] coming out and saying this on the eve of a flood?鈥 she asked. 鈥淚f he thinks he鈥檚 winning votes, he鈥檚 really not reading the room.鈥澛
The Wilderness Society (TWS) has long been campaigning against the dam wall being raised.
It cited former NSW emergency services minister and Colong Foundation chair Bob Debus as saying it was 鈥渄angerously misleading鈥 to suggest that floods can be stopped by raising the Warragamba Dam wall.
TWS said on October 7 that Perrottet鈥檚 SSI decision prevents any community scrutiny of the proposal through the courts. It said communities would not be protected this way as 鈥渁lmost half of the flooding in the valley comes from waters that are not controlled by the Warragamba Dam鈥.
This is also the reason why former planning minister Rob Stokes 鈥渞efused to declare the dam project Critical State Significant Infrastructure in September 2021鈥, TWS said, pointing聽out that Perrottet is ignoring his own government鈥檚 criticisms of the project.
The of the project鈥檚 environmental impact assessment, released in September, found that it 鈥渉ad been improperly prepared鈥 by government agencies and SMEC Engineering.
鈥淎 clear picture is now emerging of the Perrottet government,鈥 TWS said. 鈥淚t is unwilling to find sensible solutions to flooding in Western Sydney, to respect good governance procedures聽or to seriously engage with community criticism about this flawed and dangerous scheme.鈥
According to Pittock: 鈥淭here are no simple or cheap solutions to reducing the risk to life and property from floods in the Hawkesbury-Nepean Valley. Dangerous floods are inevitable and the safest option is to keep people off the floodplain, out of harm鈥檚 way.鈥
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