Huge rocks swept up to 30 metres from the seawall.
(Supplied: ABC Radio listener Graham)
|
Key Points
|
Emergency services rescued the family from Griffiths Island on Sunday after large waves and a high tide left them stranded, unable to access the narrow pedestrian walkway that would link them to the mainland.
Port Fairy-based shire councillor Jordan Lockett said the force of the ocean was incredible and roads were strewn with seaweed and large boulders.
"Some of the boulders would take literally four strong people to lift and the ocean has just flipped it across the road, so there's a huge might there," he said.Locals reported some rocks had been moved up to 20 or 30 metres from the sea wall, which lined a road along the town's South Beach precinct.
Wild surf has battered Victoria's south-west coast, sweeping large
boulders onto a road.
(Supplied: ABC Radio listener Graham) |
The Victorian government has already instructed councils to plan for a 0.8-metre sea level rise by 2100.
But updated data released by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) predicted sea level rises of up to 1.1m.
Climate change impacts swell patterns
Speaking to the ABC last year, coastal geomorphologist David Kennedy from the University of Melbourne said Victorian coastal areas were under threat from changes to swell patterns as a consequence of climate change.
"It raises the question, if this is what Port Fairy is seeing today, how will this community cope with sea level rises of 10, 20 centimetres — let alone a metre of sea level rise," he said.
Mr Ewbank said other Victorian towns, such as Apollo Bay and Inverloch, had already sounded the alarm about the issue.
"It was only a matter of time before the Port Fairy community started connecting the dots," he said.
But some Port Fairy locals are already involved in a citizen-science program gathering data about coastal erosion and monitoring changes to the coastline.
The group formed after 4m of coastline was lost to coastal erosion in 2013 and threatened to expose an old rubbish site.
The small town of Port Fairy lies just over three hours' drive from
Melbourne, on the state's south-west coast.
(Supplied: ABC Radio listener Graham)
|
The wild weather over the weekend also impacted local penguin populations.
Tracey Wilson has been running a wildlife centre near Warrnambool and said she rescued three penguins that washed up on nearby beaches.
Tracey Wilson says she's lucky if one in 10 penguins survive.
(Supplied: Mosswood Wildlife Centre)
|
"When we get them they're often so weak they can't stand up."Ms Wilson is urging anyone who sees a penguin on the beach to contact wildlife rescuers.
"Please don't ignore a penguin that's on the beach, if it's still alive please get it help," she said.
"If you can approach them, they're in a lot of trouble and just shouldn't be there at all."
Links
- The race is on to build a rock wall as erosion threatens to spill rubbish into the sea
- When the beach started to vanish, these citizen scientists came to the rescue
- 'I can't mitigate my risk': Projections identify the coastal homes likely to be inundated by rising sea levels
- How coastal communities on Victoria's Bellarine Peninsula are dealing with the reality of sea level rises
No comments:
Post a Comment