Actioning the piecemeal disaster mitigation approaches across Australia
The author has major concerns about piecemeal disaster mitigation approaches across Australia that are getting us nowhere, over decades. Whole communities, towns and cities have inadequate and unsafe disaster protection, including for floods and bushfires.
Current disaster approaches are doomed to failure
Current disaster management and mitigation approaches are doomed to failure because of inadequate policy, funding and management approaches to disaster management and mitigation across Australia, including inadequate understanding of the scale of disaster problems in towns and cities. There is little consideration of whole community, town and city vulnerability and exposure. There have been no real attempts to tackle and improve disaster mitigation for whole communities.
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Inadequate disaster preparation
It is the author's belief that South East Australia continues to be not adequately prepared for upcoming bushfires and to be frank we as a society have learnt very little following 2019/20 and earlier bushfires, especially in regards to inadequate bushfire mitigation. As a consequence, communities, firefighters and the ecosystems are highly exposed over the coming bushfire seasons. Disaster insurance costs are going up every year and will continue to go up with current limited adopted fire mitigation approaches.
Good bushfire preparation and preparedness is important in order to reduce risks to households, communities and firefighters, reduce fuel loads and strata, reduce areas of contiguous fuels across landscapes, reduce bushfire risks, assist in controlling bushfires, reduce bushfire intensity and extent and reduce costs and impacts of bushfires, including rising insurance and levy costs.
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