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Jennifer Marohasy

Jennifer Marohasy

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What is Special About This Drought?

August 25, 2006 By jennifer

On Monday I posted a graph of rainfall history and suggested that it indicated south east Queensland was not experiencing the worst drought in 100 years – that the current dry spell is not unusual in the scheme of things.

I was surprised how many comments in the thread following the post, and also in the many emails I received, were supportive of the notion that this is a worst drought ever.

Some argued that I didn’t understand definitions of drought and that a drought could simply be a result of too many people squashed into a region without the infrastructure to supply adequate water. Comment was also made that it would be interesting to see the rainfall history for the catchment averaged over 10 years.

Warwick Hughes has sent me the following graph, showing the rainfall history averaged over 10 years:

Bris10yrav blog 2.GIF

Mr Beattie has been reported in the Courier Mail stating that:

“Rainfall in the region has been well below average for the past six years and in fact it is the worst 10-year period in history,” he said. “It has been dry after dry, year after year, which has led to major storage deficits in our dams.”

Looking at the above graph Beattie may be technically correct, we may have had the worst 10-year period in recorded history, and those who want to define drought based on ‘supply’ rather than ‘rainfall’ may also be correct because we have never had so many people living in south east Queensland and probably never as many trees growing in the catchment.

But the above graph, and the graph posted on Monday, does indicate that south east Queensland has experienced comparative periods of low rainfall during the 1920s and 1940s. The current dry period is not unusual in the scheme of things.

My point is that: If we can not reconcile ourselves with our history, how can we hope to prepare for the future? It is important we understand what is special about this drought.

If we could perhaps start to acnowledge that rainfall has not been exceptionally low, we might, for example, be able to more clearly focus on other variables, including population.

There is also the issue of tree cover. A heavily timbered catchment generally produces less runoff. Page 7 of yesterday’s The Land reports Malcolm Turnbull, federal parliamentary secretary for water, explaining that the West Australian Water Corporation is thinning catchment forestry to increase run off by 6,000 megalitres a year. Mr Turnbull said the method could deliver “new water” at about 20c/kilolitre – far cheaper than piping or desalination.

I am not necessarily advocating tree clearing in the Wivenhoe catchment, but rather my issue is that here in Queensland, we tend to invoke ‘exceptional circumstances’ whenever there is a flood or a drought rather than taking a more evidence-based, and dare I suggest, more responsible approach.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Water

Remembering When The Murray Flooded

August 25, 2006 By jennifer

The most severe natural disaster in the history of South Australia will be commemorated this Sunday with the launch of the 1956 River Murray Flood 50th Anniversary Exhibition in Renmark.

Read more here.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Water

Peak Oil & Agriculture: Comments & Links

August 25, 2006 By jennifer

Jennifer,

Following are two disturbing reports on “peak oil” you may not have seen.

They could have a big impact on intensive agriculture regarding costs. May be some opportunities for communities to grow and supply a lot more of their own produce, using permaculture or more sustainable/regenerative farming practices.

Certainly glad that I don’t rely on big tractors and high inputs. Also highlights the futility on the current debate over ethanol/biofuels etc. We need a better answer than that.

http://www.aph.gov.au/hansard/senate/commttee/S9515.pdf
http://www.spinninglobe.net/iraq&oil.htm”>http://www.spinninglobe.net/iraq&oil.htm”>http://www.spinninglobe.net/iraq&oil.htm

Cheers, Graham F.

And another reader, also called Graham, sent me this note:
Some important concepts in here, without endorsing all of it:
http://www.workingforchange.com/article.cfm?itemid=21263 .

And John Quiggin had something on peak oil yesterday:
http://johnquiggin.com/index.php/archives/2006/08/23/is-peak-oil-here-already/#more-3146.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Uncategorized

Note On Herbicide Resistance: Chris Preston

August 25, 2006 By jennifer

Thirty-three different species of weeds are now reported to have developed resistance to herbicides commonly used in Australian farming systems, says Dr Chris Preston, programme leader for the Weeds CRC.

The worst offenders are annual ryegrass, wild radish and wild oats.

And of the thirteen ‘families’ of chemicals used to control weeds, resistance to ten has now been found in various agricultural weeds, Dr Preston says.

“Those ten groups of herbicides, as you’d expect, are the ones that are most commonly used in our cropping systems,” he adds.

In a few areas of Australia the herbicide resistance problem has become so acute that there are no longer any herbicides available to control particular weeds – such as annual ryegrass – in some crops.

You can read more here.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Weeds & Ferals

Much Money & More Models Won’t Necessarily Save The Macquarie Marshes

August 23, 2006 By jennifer

Malcolm Turnbull, the Federal Parliamentary Secretary for water, recently announced a $13.4 million grant to revive the Macquarie Marshes and other important wetlands.

But it is unclear how the money will be spent. Reference has been made to ‘plans’, ‘models’, ‘competing interests’, ‘drought’, ‘market mechanisms to recover water’, and ‘noxious weeds’.

But more money, more plans, more water won’t necessarily save the marshes.

There has been much discussion at his blog about the relative impact of drought, levies, grazing and cotton since I first visited the marshes in October last year.*

I have come to the conclusion that the marsh environment would benefit most from the following actions which were detailed in a blog post entitled ‘Three Pressing Issues for the Macquarie Marshes’:

1. Bulldoze the levy banks which are channeling water away from the two nature reserves and onto private land,

2. Protect key bird nesting sites from trampling by cattle.

3. Reduce the risk of overgrazing perhaps through some agreement about stocking rates and grazing regimes.

These actions would not be popular locally or easily understood in Sydney, but they would make a difference on the ground and they wouldn’t cost a lot of money.

Chris Hogendyk, an irrigator and chairman of Macquarie River Food and Fibre (MRFF), sent me a note following the $14.3 million announcement. He recommends that more land be purchased and converted to nature reserve:

“Both the Macquarie Marshes and Gwydir Wetlands are iconic wetlands valued internationally and by the local community.

… It is overly simplistic during a drought of record proportions to simply call for more water to solve the problems that face these important wetlands.

… 90% of the Marshes are in private hands which means 90% of any purchased water will be used for little more than grazing.

As a taxpayer I do not think that funding the purchase of water under these conditions will achieve a good environmental outcome.

In fact, more water delivered simply means more cattle and that in turn leads to further degradation of the environment.

MRFF has no problem in principle with the Government purchasing water from willing sellers to be used for the benefit of the environment, but we do object the Government purchasing water from one stakeholder group and delivering it to another stakeholder group free of charge.

MRFF proposes that a much better solution would be to purchase key land area within the marshes to protect this environment from grazing and hence get much better environmental value from the water there today.”

————————
* Blog posts on Macquarie Marsh issues:

1. Cattle killing the Macquarie Marshes, 21October 2005
https://jennifermarohasy.com.dev.internet-thinking.com.au/blog/archives/000949.html

2. Marsh Graziers Don’t Pay for Water, 25 October 2005
https://jennifermarohasy.com.dev.internet-thinking.com.au/blog/archives/000958.html

3. More Water Won’t Save the Macquarie Marshes, 28 March 2006
https://jennifermarohasy.com.dev.internet-thinking.com.au/blog/archives/001282.html

4. But Reed Beds Need Water!, 12 April 2006
https://jennifermarohasy.com.dev.internet-thinking.com.au/blog/archives/001309.html

5. Three Pressing Issues for the Macquarie Marshes, 13 July 2006
https://jennifermarohasy.com.dev.internet-thinking.com.au/blog/archives/001481.html

6. Banking in the Macquarie Marshes: More Photographs & A Map, 17 July 2006
https://jennifermarohasy.com.dev.internet-thinking.com.au/blog/archives/001486.html

7. Fewer Trees Means More Water for Macquarie Marshes: Ian Mott, 23 July 2006
https://jennifermarohasy.com.dev.internet-thinking.com.au/blog/archives/001497.html

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Water

Worst Drought in 100 Years – or Not? (Updated August 22, 2006)

August 21, 2006 By jennifer

We are in the middle of an election in Queensland, Australia.

My local member has just sent me a glossy brochure stating that:

“Queensland is experiencing the worst drought in 100 years …no other government in our history has faced a challenge of this enormity.”

The Premier Peter Beattie has being repeating the same message for some time.

So how bad is it – really?

The catchment with Brisbane’s dams is reportly the most severely affected.
Warwick Hughes
has constructed the following graph from the rainfall record for the Wivenhoe catchment — that’s the catchment with the dams:

brisbrainver2.GIF

So there is really nothing unprecedented about the current dry spell? Could the Bureau of Meteorology please correct the graph, or correct the Premier?

Update 22 August

Simon commented (see following thread) that the above graph looks different to the graph posted by Warwick at his site. Following is the graph posted by Warwick:

brisbrainver4blog.GIF

I made the error of assuming the graph Warwick sent me on the weekend was the same as the one he had posted at his blog. There are slightly differences after 1990, because as Warwick explains in the note at his website, “rainfall data is less than perfect, many stations close and an alternative has to be opened at another site, recordings can start then stop, there can be gaps in the data”.

In the graph I posted, Warwick had used values from neighbouring stations to see what a more complete record for the catchment looked like.

He has sent me the following comment tonight:

“If I can obtain a more complete catchment dataset I might spend a long day trying to correct these.

The Bureau of Meteorology and water utility have had years to publish a graph of catchment rain history if they wished to do so.

Clearly, it must not be perceived to be in their interests or they would have done so.

Likewise, I have never seen catchment rain history charts made by a water utility or the BoM for Perth, Sydney or Melbourne but maybe there are some I have not spotted.

Why is this when water supply issues are controversial in all our cities and all our dam water originates as rain.

I see the issue of the 2002 drought being raised and I show from the Australia wide Bureau of Meteorology high quality rain data that in 2002 there was a Great West Queensland drought but nothing nationwide to match the Federation drought.

…With respect to the claims of “worst drought in a whatever”, the criterion I was talking about was the definitions of serious and severe drought as on the Bureau of Meteorology website and as expressed in their maps with shades of pink to red. I have a small area of their latest 3 year map shown on my Brisbane page. Now I do not know what result you would get if that Bureau of Meteorology 36 month drought map series could be rolled back through 2000.

But do we expect policymakers to be making such definitive statements about data that is far from black and white and when the result is probably so line ball?“

When I look at the second graph I see regular wet periods with yearly averages around 1200mm (once as high as 1400mm) and there have also been regular dry periods with yearly averages around the 600mm (once as low as perhaps 450mm). We are currently in one of the dry periods with yearly averages in the 700-800mm range.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Climate & Climate Change

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Jennifer Marohasy Jennifer Marohasy BSc PhD has worked in industry and government. She is currently researching a novel technique for long-range weather forecasting funded by the B. Macfie Family Foundation. Read more

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To get in touch with Jennifer call 0418873222 or international call +61418873222.

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