- Mobile site
- E-Newsletters
-
- News feed
- Find us on Twitter
@Essex_Echo
Follow us
- Find us on Facebook
Echo
Like us on Facebook
VIDEO: Have lessons been learned from Canvey flood disaster? (From Echo)
Get involved: send your pictures, video, news and views by texting ECHONEWS to 80360, or email us »
VIDEO: Have lessons been learned from Canvey flood disaster?
5:03pm Wednesday 30th January 2013 in Local News
VIDEO: Have lessons been learned from Canvey flood disaster?
ON the eve of the anniversary of the 1953 Canvey flood disaster, a university is asking if any lessons have been learned.
Today such floods, caused by storm surges, are predicted by a warning system implemented after the 1953 flood.
Despite the warning system, coastal flooding remains a key concern both for residents and government. In 2007 warnings from the system led to the government calling a meeting of the emergency COBRA committee.The impact of coastal flooding is predicted to become worse due to climate change.
The early history of this warning system and who paid for the research behind it has recently been researched by Anna Carlsson-Hyslop from the Department of Sociology at Lancaster University, funded by the ESRC.
Scientists based at the Liverpool Observatory and Tidal Institute had researched storm surges since the 1920s.
The scientists, housed in the Bidston Observatory on the Wirral peninsula, had been funded by the shipping industry, the Navy and local government, but central government rejected funding requests for surge science until after the 1953 flood.
Comments(5)
iknowbetter
says...
5:35pm Wed 30 Jan 13
Money talks though and it would seem that it is more important then lives.
marshman
says...
9:21pm Wed 30 Jan 13
Hugh.Janus
says...
10:05pm Wed 30 Jan 13
Take Japan for instance, following their earthquake they all thought the 10 meter sea wall they had built would protect them for a tsunami. What they did not account for was a wall of water 10 meters high and the land surrounding the earthquake dropping by a meter, meaning that the wall was 1 meter short of stopping the tsunami and over it went, killing 1000s.
I am not saying that this would happen here but to ignore the dangers of a possible flood sometime in the future if the same elements as happened 60 years ago occurred and came together again, who knows?
It is therefore somewhat irresponsible to keep building houses on a flood plain and potentially putting more lives at risk. This Island has a big enough population now, it does not need any more building on it.
SARFENDMAN
says...
10:24pm Wed 30 Jan 13
Carnabackable says...
5:32pm Wed 30 Jan 13