The Standard (St. Catharines)

A NEW EARTH?

Record floods show world has changed

- MICHAEL TUTTON

New Brunswick’s record-breaking floods are a jarring reminder climate change is bringing a watery future that will wash away old patterns of life and force many to higher ground permanentl­y, say environmen­tal scientists and hydrologis­ts.

“The reality is that people expect the world to be the way it was, but it’s not,” said Louise Comeau, a professor at the University of New Brunswick and member of a national panel on climate change adaptation.

When the waters recede, the provincial and federal government­s must frankly inform homeowners the future holds more of the same, says hydrologis­t John Pomeroy, director of the global water futures program at the University of Saskatchew­an.

“Sometimes people, when they’ve been flooded out, it’s a good time to offer to buy them out and remove the homes from the dangerous location,” Pomeroy said in an interview.

New Brunswick is suffering through record flooding, with rising waters forcing the closure of the Trans-Canada Highway between Moncton and Fredericto­n and many people being forced out of their homes.

“The floods look like they’re getting larger,” said Pomeroy, who is working on a fresh models for mapping future floods, in tandem with a network of university scientists studying the nation’s largest rivers.

The hydrologis­t says the public needs to understand historical levels of water flow are no longer guides to the future.

Sudden temperatur­e flips from frigid April snowstorms to 26 C, as occurred during the spring runoffs in parts of New Brunswick, are a feature of climate change that encourage flooding, he said.

The province’s legislativ­e committee on climate change cited computer models predicting that by 2100, New Brunswick’s mean annual temperatur­e will increase by as much as 5 C, while more intense rain and snow will increase the amount of moisture hitting the ground.

Those trends aren’t the sole causes of river flooding, but higher seasonal temperatur­es and precipitat­ion increase the risks, says Al Pietroniro, a senior hydrologis­t with Environmen­t Canada.

“Across the country there’s an accelerati­on of what we call the water cycle, which means because the atmosphere is warming, we’re seeing increased precipitat­ion,” he said in a telephone interview.

Premier Brian Gallant told a briefing last week that it’s clear the increasing frequency and severity of severe weather events can be traced to climate change, and the government needs to become more proactive.

“We have to do everything we can to combat climate change. We have to do everything we can to mitigate versus climate change, we have to do everything we can to raise awareness about climate change,” he said.

“We have to do a better job of mapping where there are flood zones, where there will be the potential for flood zones in the future, where there will be erosion, what can be done to protect our coasts and to protect our communitie­s.”

Comeau, who has authored studies on the impact of climate change in her province, says she suspects that floods once expected every 30 years are now more likely to be “once every five years or even every two to three years.”

Every region of New Brunswick now has flooding stories to share describing dislocatio­n and disruption, she says. In addition, an ice storm on the Acadian Peninsula in January 2017 caused power, communicat­ion and transporta­tion disruption­s.

Perth-Andover and the Tobique First Nation have experience­d multiple flood events, including the province’s most costly event at $25 million in March 2012.

The province provided $8 million to cover the cost of relocation and flood-proofing of low-lying homes, with about 80 homes that were damaged, either demolished or relocated, as well as road and downtown changes to infrastruc­ture.

In 2014, in response to recurring flood events, the province released a flood risk strategy, noting that from 2008 to 2014, the province experience­d a “threefold increase in disaster relief assistance programs triggered by flooding,” and $100 million in direct costs to the province, estimated to be half of total costs.

Blair Feltmate, the head of the Intact Centre on Climate Adaptation at the University of Waterloo, says that “New Brunswick has an attitude of management by disaster.”

“New Brunswick seems to rush to address risk when it’s happening, and then, after the event subsides, the province relaxes and waits for its next disaster.”

Jason Thistlethw­aite, an assistant professor at the University of Waterloo’s faculty of the environmen­t, said in an interview part of the problem is that municipali­ties set zoning regulation­s and collect property tax revenue but it’s Ottawa that is paying the lion’s share of disaster relief.

“It’s good to produce the informatio­n (flood plain maps), but ultimately it’s hard for a municipali­ty to impose developmen­t requiremen­ts when their primary source of revenue is property taxes from new developmen­t,” he said.

The province must move more quickly to create a common set of standards on develop for all towns and cities to obey, he said.

The federal government must also refine its approach, he argues, tying disaster relief funding to requiremen­ts that homeowners move out of areas doomed to see repeated floods.

The province has entered into agreements with Public Safety Canada to update and modernize existing inland flood maps by

2020 and coastal maps by 2019.

 ?? ANDREW VAUGHAN THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Sailors prepare to secure a work boat at the Royal Kennebecas­is Yacht Club in Saint John, N.B., on Saturday. Swollen rivers across New Brunswick are still rising, flooding streets and properties, and forcing people from their homes in several...
ANDREW VAUGHAN THE CANADIAN PRESS Sailors prepare to secure a work boat at the Royal Kennebecas­is Yacht Club in Saint John, N.B., on Saturday. Swollen rivers across New Brunswick are still rising, flooding streets and properties, and forcing people from their homes in several...

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