Preparing for the expected: tropical cyclones in South East Queensland

Journal Publication ResearchOnline@JCU
Sexton, Jane;Tait, Michael;Turner, Heidi;Arthur, Craig;Henderson, David;Edwards, Mark
Abstract

Ask a Queenslander where tropical cyclones occur and the inevitable response will be, North Queensland. While most of the tropical cyclones have made landfall north of Bundaberg, the cascading and concurrent effects are felt much further afield. The major flooding following Tropical Cyclone Yasi in 2011 and Tropical Cyclone Debbie in 2017 are 2 examples where impacts were felt across the state, and the damage to the banana plantation following Tropical Cyclone Larry (2006) was felt nationally. Acknowledging that climate is influencing the intensity and frequency of intense severe weather hazards, understanding how tropical cyclone hazard varies under future climate conditions is critical to risk-based planning in Queensland. With this climate influence, along with increasing population and more vulnerable building design in South East Queensland (relative to northern Queensland), there is an urgent need to assess the wind risk and set in place plans to reduce the effects of a potential tropical cyclone in South East Queensland.

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Australian Journal of Emergency Management

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38

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1324-1540

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4

Pages Count

7

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Australian Institute for Disaster Resilience

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