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Bold Action, Big Money Needed To Curb Asia Floods


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Bold action, big money needed to curb Asia floods

by Aidan Jones

CHIANG MAI, Thailand, May 19, 2013 (AFP) - Asia's flood-prone megacities should fund major drainage, water recycling and waste reduction projects to stem deluges and secure clean supply for their booming populations, experts said Sunday.

Rapid urbanisation has heaped pressure on water resources and drainage systems across Asia, leaving low-lying areas exposed to massive floods such as those that paralysed Jakarta and Manila last year and central Thailand in 2011.

"The lust for land -- driven by urbanisation -- is narrowing drainage across most Asian cities so even small amounts of rainfall can cause massive problems," Kulwant Singh of the UN-HABITAT said at a water security forum in Thailand.

Citing the estimated $45 billion cost of the kingdom's catastrophic floods in late 2011, Singh said "there should be no question" of governments paying for big infrastructure projects to protect cities.

"If ten years of wealth is suddenly wiped out, it makes sense to spend a fraction of that on long-term prevention," he added, urging consideration for ambitious prevention schemes.

Flood management has been in focus in Thailand since the 2011 floods, which inundated swathes of the country for months, deluged parts of the capital and tool a heavy toll on its lucrative manufacturing base.

One ambitious proposal by Thailand Underground Tunnelling Group (TUTG) would see two vast tunnels built beneath Bangkok to siphon off water from heavy monsoons.

Echoing a two-tiered 'smart-tunnel' through the Malaysian capital Kuala Lumpur, the passage could also hold an underground road that could be closed to take water in the event of a major flood.

The scheme, which would cost around $3.5 billion, could return excess water to the city's shrivelling groundwater reserves in an aquifer layer under the city which is in part responsible for it gradually sinking.

"Bangkok is sinking... if we can store water (from heavy rains) we can also recharge the aquifer," said Zaw Zaw Aye of TUTG.

Other sustainable solutions to the water problems facing the region's booming cities include recycling more water -- something successfully pioneered by Singapore -- and stemming leaks and other waste.

"We try to collect every drop that falls from the sky; collect every drop we use and try to use every drop more than once," said Chew Men Leong of PUB -- the city-state's water agency.

One third of Singapore's water is currently recycled, he added.

The Asian Development Bank last month warned that nearly two thirds of people in the Asia-Pacific region have no clean, piped water at home despite the region's strong economic growth, blaming poor management and a lack of investment in infrastructure rather than short supplies.

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-- (c) Copyright AFP 2013-05-19

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How about ensuring the dams are not full at the beginning of the rainy season? How about taking politics out of which floodgates stay closed so certain politician's rice crops are not flooded? How about dismantling illegal construction that blocks drainage klongs? How about going into action before there is a crisis? How about hiring experts to head water-management bureaus instead of loyal political hacks? The above suggestions would go a long way toward preventing all but the worst of floods and they cost the taxpayer nothing. Problem: nothing in the above suggestions puts money in politicians' and their cronies' pockets.

Edited by rametindallas
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How about not having the dams full at the beginning of the rainy season? How about not letting politics decide which floodgates stay closed so certain powerful politicians don't get their rice crops flooded? How about having actual plans-of-action in place and implementing them BEFORE it becomes a crisis? How about dismantling construction built on drainage klongs? How about having experts in charge of water/flood management departments instead of loyal political hacks? The above suggestions would prevent serious flooding in all but the worst cases and would cost the taxpayers nothing. Problem: non of the above suggestions put any money in the pockets of politicians or their cronies.

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How about not having the dams full at the beginning of the rainy season? How about not letting politics decide which floodgates stay closed so certain powerful politicians don't get their rice crops flooded? How about having actual plans-of-action in place and implementing them BEFORE it becomes a crisis? How about dismantling construction built on drainage klongs? How about having experts in charge of water/flood management departments instead of loyal political hacks? The above suggestions would prevent serious flooding in all but the worst cases and would cost the taxpayers nothing. Problem: non of the above suggestions put any money in the pockets of politicians or their cronies.

That's EXACTLY the problem that the rich, political and feudal mafia ministry elite are all a bunch of selfish, ignorant porky pigs that only have thing in mind: MONEY THROUGH RIP OFF

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Of course the low tech solution is to jack up the entire country on to a platform,imagine like a giant snooker table pivoted on say Lopburi (but he's such a good chap) no say Pitsanuloke then when the rising tides of falang wetness threaten to swamp the land of the free tilt the Gulf up and Lanna down a meter,the gravy would flow to San Kampheang the low life would be raised up and oddballs could spin off to Pattaya.

Whole engine to be powered by hot air of politicians.Failing this giant pack of wetwipes and fill yer sandbags as usual.

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