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Mr. Smith, the meteorologist, said the flooding situation this year had been aggravated by bad water management.
“They miscalculated the water levels and did not discharge water from the dams early enough in the rainy season,” he said. “The dams are almost full now, so they discharge the water at the same time, and all the discharge water comes down to the low-lying areas.”
Those areas become obstacles to the free flow of water, he said, as developers continue to extend their activities.
“They build their estates in low-lying areas that are supposed to be reservoirs,” he said, “and they throw up a dam or a dike, and they block the flow where the water is supposed to go in rainy season.”
Interestingly, I aquired that link from another blog which trys to spread FUD in the other direction:
With climate change, we can expect intense rain events, like those that contributed to the Thai floods, to become more common and severe.
It's not an extreme weather event, its the rainy season, it does this every year. Its the rest of the enviromental damage, unrelated to global warming but now ignored as everyone obsesses about carbon emissions that has caused this problem.
I read that Thailand is used to these floods but usually the water is redirected into fields away from the conurbations.
This time they decided not to do the usual redirection due to those fields being owned by the ex-PM and other influential people, so millions get flooded so a few rice fields survive.
May be BS but wouldn't surprise me if it's true. Greed always wins. See the eurozone.
When AGW goes wrong; in response to AGW predictions that there would be long dry spells and drought, the Thai government ordered all reservoirs to be filled to the maximum. The dry spell and drought never happened but once the rains came there was no spare capacity in the reservoirs hence the overflowed, caused flooding and killed over 300 people.
After paying the Thai Met Office to investigate AGW, the government is now considering sacking the management.
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