Changing weather could lead to ‘significant’ risks to Cork

A flood warning in Bantry last October. Picture: Andy GIbson.
As evidence of climate change becomes ever more obvious, a UCC expert on climate change and wind energy has said that Cork risks suffering significant damage on a number of fronts, particularly when threats from weather events are compounded.
Dr Paul Leahy was speaking to The Echo as a new Environmental Protection Agency report disclosed that Ireland faced a total of 115 risks ranging from projected changes in climate conditions.
This major study, the first of its type, was undertaken by the EPA in collaboration with government departments, state agencies, and other stakeholders to assess where, when and how climate risks are likely to impact Ireland over the coming decades.
Among the main threats faced by Ireland are the risk of disruption and damage to communications and energy distribution due to extreme wind and the risk of disruption and damage to buildings and transport infrastructure due to extreme wind, coastal erosion and coastal flooding.
Referring to the 2009 floods which caused hundreds of millions of Euro worth of damage to Cork city centre, Dr Leahy said that was an instance of a climate related compound event.
“We had a fairly long wetter-than-average period of several months leading up to November 2009.
"What happened was the soils in most of the Lee catchment upstream of the city were approaching saturation, they couldn’t store anymore water, they were sodden, they were water-logged.
"But there was nowhere for the water to go and when all that heavy rain came down, it all just ran off into the river – that’s what caused the big flood wave which came down into the city.”
According to climate experts the risk of such compounds is increasing as more frequent weather events are happening, an event that would have previously been recorded every 30 or forty years is becoming closer to every ten years.