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DISASTER RISK REDUCTION CONFERENCE:
26-27 MAY 2009 DiMTEC
THE APPLICATION OF FLOOD LINES IN
LAND USE CONTROL
Mzamani Khoza: Involved with Disaster Management Capacity
Building and Research in the SA National Disaster Management
Centre
(Based on a case study of Moreleta Spruit in Tshwane)
Acknowledgements: Prof. MF Viljoen (Supervisor),
Chris Swiegers (Mentor)
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Outline of the presentation
SOME KEY DEFINITIONS
AIM OF THE STUDY
BACKGROUND
METHODOLOGY
POLICY REQUIREMENTS
WHY FLOOD LINES?
LAND USES IN FLOOD HAZARD AREAS
SYNOPTIC REMARKS
CONCLUNDING STATEMENT
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SOME KEY DEFEINITONS
Flood: a discharge that causes damage, or overtops the river
banks, or exceeds a specified value (Alexander, 2000).
The term may also be used to alert the public of non-life
threatening inundations of small streams, streets, storm
drains, and low lying urban areas.
Flood line: Hydrologically, the risks of flooding in rivers and
flood plains are expressed as flood lines, with specific
flooding likelihoods, computed on average qualification.
Land-use: any developmental activity or human modification
of either terrestrial or aquatic environment, or both, and
has a potential of influencing the nature of flooding.
Spruit: Afrikaans word for stream.
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AIM OF THE STUDY
To analyze the policies, principles and practices
regarding the establishment and application of
flood lines with respect to development in floodprone areas in the CTMM.
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BACKGROUND
(Flood) Disasters acts of man or acts of God?
Floods and their impacts
What interventions?
Focus on flood lines principles
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METHODOLOGY
Literature study: To review a body of research and
establish how other researchers have investigated the
subject of flood management, in particular, the
application of flood lines in the urban context.
Analysis of the legal framework with reference to
flood lines: To determine legislative requirements for
the application of flood lines
Interviews and a focus group discussion: To
establish the extent to which principles of flood lines
are integrated in land use control concerns.
Samples: Purposive sampling (Strydom, Fouche, &
Delport, 2005)
Disaster Risk Management is everybodys business - towards a resilient South Africa
GIS Analysis (flood lines
and land use)
Credit: Dirk Craigie (DWAF Senior GIS Analyst)
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Disaster Risk Management is everybodys business - towards a resilient South Africa
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Visualization of how flood hazards were computed
Disaster Risk Management is everybodys business - towards a resilient South Africa
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These flood scenarios were used, defined in terms
of probability of flood hazard occurrence:
Low Flood Hazard
: 1 in 100 years
Medium Flood Hazard : 1 in 50 years
High Flood Hazard
: 1 in 20 years
Sources of data sets:
Data on flood lines: obtained from SRK Consulting
Aerial photos of the study area: obtained from CTMM
Geomatics
Vegetation cover (NCL2000): obtained from DWAF
GIS Section
Land use data: obtained from GeoTerraImage
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LEGISLAVE REQUIREMENTS
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South African policy:
NWA (No 36 of 1998): no person may establish a
township unless the layout plan shows, in a form
acceptable to the local authority concerned, lines
indicating the maximum level likely to be reached by
floodwaters on average once in every 100 years
(NWA, Section 143).
CARA (No. 43 of 1983): restrictions of certain plants
within 30m of a 1:50 flood line (Section 15).
CTMM (Flood Management Plan & by-laws)
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WHY FLOOD LINES?
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To control development in flood plains (Alexander
2000)
Flood lines have been determined the 200-year
and 100-year indicative flood lines have been
calculated for the whole Spruit whilst the 50-year
flood line for most of the Spruit. The 100-year
actual flood line, however, has not been
determined yet (SRK Consulting, 2006)
Moreleta Spruit flood lines are post-development.
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LAND USES IN FLOOD HAZARD AREAS
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The purpose was neither to do vulnerability assessment nor
flood damage assessment, but rather to identify and
demonstrate the land uses falling with the different sized
(20-year; 50-year and 100-year) flood hazards.
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SYNOPTIC REMARKS
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Development of guidelines: for the establishment and
application of flood lines with clearly defined roles and
responsibilities for all sector departments and foster
efficient communication and integration of pertinent role
players
Flood lines vs. development lines
Major floods vs. minor floods
Environmental considerations: the benefits of any
development/land use undertaken without incorporating
the principles of integrated environmental management
will only be short lived.
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SYNOPTIC REMARKS cont.
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Part of the solutions could include engineering works,
education and (early) warning systems and
enforcement
Political commitment: defined in terms of political
commitment and strong institutions, the government must
elevate disaster risk reduction as a policy priority, allocate
the necessary resources for it, enforce its implementation
and assign accountability for failures, as well as facilitate
participation from civil society and private sector.
Public responsibility: families, businesses and industries
whose properties are within flood hazard areas should
build fence walls to prevent flood waters from entering
into their yards and to raise their buildings foundations
above the 1:50 year flood line (and 1:100 flood line where
feasible).
Applaud the good, correct/change the bad
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Concluding statement
The precursor to any effective risk and
vulnerability reduction is not purely the
implementation of a disaster management
programme, it is the implementation of a sound
development programme (Westgate 1999 in
Viljoen, du Plessis, Booysen, Weepener, Braune,
Van Bladeren, & Butler . 2001).
Kanimambo!!!
Disaster Risk Management is everybodys business - towards a resilient South Africa