Hauraki-Coromandel Post

‘Big costs’ ahead for flood protection

More than $1 billion in assets at risk from Thames flooding

- Al Williams

We’re facing up to these challenges headon, and doing the forwardthi­nking, groundbrea­king work that’s required, rather than just hoping the issues somehow go away. It’s a multigener­ational vision and longterm action plan. Len Salt

Thames is going to come up against some “big costs” as it attempts to tackle shoreline protection. Thames-coromandel Mayor Len Salt said those costs needed to be assessed against the value of what’s at risk.

“We’re facing up to these challenges head-on, and doing the forward-thinking, groundbrea­king work that’s required, rather than just hoping the issues somehow go away. It’s a multi-generation­al vision and long-term action plan.”

Work on design concepts for the protection of Thames was under way, following project work showing $1 billion in assets were at risk over the long term from the effects of flooding and storm surges associated with sealevel rise.

Protection was the preferred adaptation pathway for Thames confirmed by community consultati­on during the Shoreline Management project.

The three-year project examined the risks to the entire Coromandel coastline from the effects of sea-level rise.

Specific actions to manage those risks have now been assessed and ranked, with work to protect Thames among the top priorities.

The Protection and Resilience Governance Group met for the first time this month, made up of representa­tives from the Thamescoro­mandel

Thames-coromandel District Mayor Len Salt.

District Council, Nga¯ti Maru and Waikato Regional Council.

“We know that Thames is especially vulnerable to storm surge and flooding associated with sea-level rise, putting around $1 billion of assets in our township at risk,” Salt said.

“Thames is the economic nerve centre of our district, home to the bulk of the Coromandel’s service provision, maritime industry, healthcare and business infrastruc­ture. It’s our duty to the entire region to ensure Thames is resilient, and able to grow, for generation­s to come.”

Salt said Royal Haskoningd­hv would now proceed with staged design options to protect the Thames township against coastal inundation for a 1-in-100-year event.

An earlier feasibilit­y study showed the main challenge associated with protecting Thames was the required cost and scale of any defensive structures, as many locations were low-lying.

Design work would include full hydrodynam­ic modelling and joint probabilit­y analysis of coincident coastal and fluvial flooding events.

The governance group noted it would be important that any protection structure connected with other stormwater and river management work.

Funding for the design work, and ensuing community consultati­on on design options, was allocated through the 2023-2024 Long Term Plan, with funding for the constructi­on of protection yet to be determined.

Public consultati­on on the new design concepts is expected to begin in May.

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