Date: 26
August 2002
Submission: Submission to the Channel Deepening Project
for Port Phillip Bay
Victoria's coasts are precious and
locations like Port Phillip Bay are an intensively used environment. Activity and processes on the coast, inland
in the catchment, and off shore in the ocean, have an
influence on the health and sustainability of the coastal environment.
In view of the well documented evidence
of sea level rise, the availability of alternatives, and the adverse environmental
impact, we are opposed to the deepening of the Rip and dredging of the South
Channel to allow larger container vessels entry to Port Phillip Bay.
Our objection to the deepening of the Rip
is based on the fact that there is now sound evidence of sea level rise as a
result of climate change, and that even a 1-2 cm rise in tide levels will
intensify the beach erosion and flooding already occurring on the eastern, most
vulnerable side of Port Phillip Bay.
A recent CSIRO report presented at the
Coastal Conference states that the scientific world has accepted “the evidence
of increasing atmospheric temperatures and a rising global sea level”. Analysis of global tide gauges have recorded
a sea level rise of 10 to 15 cms over 50 years (Dr
Graeme Pearman Chief CSIRO Atmospheric Research,
April 2000).
“Although tides within Port Phillip Bay
are of a smaller range than in Bass Strait, because of the narrow entrance, a
sea level rise will result in an increase in the tide range within the Bay”
(Effects of Sea Level Rise in Port Phillip Bay, 1989, Dr Eric Bird p.33). Furthermore according to Bird, “The recurrent
blasting of pinnacles of rock to enlarge the shipping channels at the entrance
to Port Phillip Bay will have the effect of assisting the penetration of Port
Phillip Bay by a global sea level rise” (Bird, p.33).
Any rise in sea level within the Bay will
cause water levels to rise alongside the banks and levees of Mordialloc Creek, Patterson River and Kananook
Creek, and by so doing the shores of the Bay “will be subject to an increasing
depth of marine flooding at high spring tides and during storm surges of the
kind often experienced in Port Phillip Bay during the passage of an intense
depression from the Great Australian Bight” (Bird, p.35).
Bradley recorded that storm surges have
raised tides in the Port of Melbourne by up to 1.94 metres
(Admiralty Datum) and 1.06 metres above the maximum
astronomical tide levels at Williamstown (Bradley J., Abnormally high tides in
the Port of Melbourne).
Severe storm surges and high tide levels
caused catastrophic floods in the Mordialloc,
Chelsea, Carrum region in 1934 and 1952 due to heavy
rain in the Dandenong Catchment,
a high tide and a strong south westerly gale.
Similar conditions in 1974 wrecked foreshore infrastructure at Chelsea
and Bonbeach.
1994 saw a repeat of this weather pattern
and the conditions were subsequently the basis of a study by the EPA and CSIRO
of the impact of storm surges on Werribee, Hobsons Bay and Mordialloc. The conclusion was that given the same storm
intensity
of 1934, Mordialloc
Creek and environs would suffer flooding of the same magnitude or in fact, more
severe (Extreme events and the impact of climate change on Victoria's coastline,
Publication 488, June 1996).
Bird’s conclusion is: “there is no doubt
that the predicted sea-level rise will greatly extend and intensify beach
erosion around Port Phillip Bay and... between Mordialloc
and Seaford the beach, and dune fringed coastlines will recede and threaten
foreshore developments”.
Southern Port Phillip Bay and the Port
Phillip Heads area contain some of Victoria's most treasured marine and coastal
environments within easy reach of Melbourne and Geelong. Dredging the South Channel would put the
unique sponge gardens and kelp forest colonies in the area in danger because of
a change in tidal flows and temperature.
Significant sites such as Pope’s Eye, Portsea
Hole and the Lonsdale Wall fall within declared port waters. Of these Pope's Eye is set aside as part of a
marine reserve.
There is also danger in the disposal of
sand and contaminated silt (from dredging the Yarra River) to spoil sites in
the Bay. Sand and silt will be disturbed
during storms and block the much needed sunlight to undersea plants, an
important part of the marine food chain.
An economic study assessed the
possibility in which Hastings in Westernport could be developed as an
alternative to Melbourne. Port of
Hastings is a natural deep water port with two deep water berths
available. A rail line currently
transports steel from Hastings throughout Australia. While the Hastings option is claimed to be
too costly it should not be dismissed given that:
§
berths are available;
§
infrastructure (the
rail link) exists; and
§
it would provide
employment to one of the State's depressed regions.
The preferred option however, is one
already mooted by shipping companies.
That is, the new generation of large ships be routed to the deep water
ports of Fremantle, Darwin and Sydney.
Containers could then be transported by standard gauge rail to other
cities. The West Australian link is
operating, and the Darwin-Adelaide and Brisbane-Mt Isa-Darwin
links are under construction.
Port Phillip Bay is Victoria's most valuable asset but is under threat from a number of sources. Deepening The Rip will not only hasten the changes already occurring to the Bay's ecology, but irreparably damage the beaches and increase the risk of flooding in the low lying, flood prone areas on the eastern side of the Bay. While deepening the shipping channel may be technically feasible, the proposal is not environmentally sustainable or responsible.
Mary Rimington
Secretary, MBCL
Back to the MBCL Resource Page
Below: Areas around Port Phillip Bay likely to be
submerged or eroded if the sea level rises by 1 metre
(Source: E. Bird, 1989).
