Gippsland › Latest news › Bass Coast Local News
Bass Coast becomes first council to use worldwide climate change risk data from newly adopted Building Asset Management Plan 2023-2033
Updated Building Asset Management Plan models the current building portfolio at the necessary funding levels each year to meet required service levels.
Bass Coast Shire Council has become one of the first councils worldwide to use climate change risk data to predict the potential impacts on council's buildings and how to manage these risks, in the newly adopted Building Asset Management Plan 2023-2033. Adopted at council meeting on 21 June, the plan draws on scientific modelling which analysed council's 410 building assets, valued at $109 million at the end of last financial year.
The purpose of this Building Asset Management Plan (BAMP) is to inform Bass Coast Shire Council's commitment to better practice asset management and provide principles for sound investment decision making
Extreme weather damages
This modelling found that the forecast cost of mitigating the impact of climate change risks on council buildings would be an additional $6.8 million funding over the next 10 years, due to higher treatment costs and shorter useful lives.
Bass Coast Shire Mayor, Cr Michael Whelan, said the modelling was necessary because Bass Coast was already seeing the impact of climate change, particularly the damaging coastal erosion caused by rising sea levels.
"Globally, climate change has seen an increased risk of extreme weather events including storm events, heatwaves, more frequent flooding, sea-level rise and increasingly severe wildfire events. Here in Bass Coast there is an increased risk of structural damage caused by extreme weather events and an increase in deterioration rates of building assets," Cr Whelan said.
Ensure efficiency and resilience
This updated Building Asset Management Plan models the current building portfolio at the necessary funding levels each year to meet required service levels. This modelling aims to reduce the potential of these assets moving into very poor condition by the end of the 10-year forecast period. Additionally, consideration of the potential impacts of climate change with higher treatment costs and shorter useful lives has been included.
Cr Whelan said he was proud that council was at the cutting edge of forecasting the impact of climate change to inform building maintenance. "Council has declared a climate emergency in 2019 and adopted our Climate Change Action Plan in 2021 with a vision that our homes, buildings and infrastructure are comfortable, efficient and resilient to the impacts of climate change," Cr Whelan said.
Commitment to better practise
Bass Coast Shire Council and members of the South-East Councils Climate Change Alliance (SECCCA) commissioned Spatial Vision to conduct modelling that incorporated asset data with potential climate impacts factoring extreme temperature, extreme rainfall, flooding, sea level rises, dryness and storm surge. The overall Asset Vulnerability Assessment (AVA) process was documented in the AVA Findings and Methods reports.
SECCA is a collaboration of nine councils in Victoria's south-east making a regional response to climate change. "The purpose of the Building Asset Management Plan (BAMP) is to inform council's commitment to better practise asset management and provide principles for sound investment decision making. The plan provides consistent guidelines, in accordance with relevant accounting standards and state government policy."
"We need to be prepared and this report identifies building assets with potentially high risk of climate change impacts that require to be renewed or upgraded with climate resilient materials," the Mayor said.
Funding and potential trade-offs
Council's next steps are to model the impacts of climate change risks for all asset classes to inform the 10 Year Asset Plan development in 2024/25. Council and the community can then consider the long-term funding needs plus potential trade-offs holistically, in review of the Long-Term Financial Plan.
Deliberative community engagement will soon take place, in context of the new council plan priorities and the potential financial impact of climate change on all council's Infrastructure assets.
Pictures from Bass Coast Shire Council website.
Source: www.gippsland.com
Published by: news@gippsland.com
ANZAC Day events across South Gippsland and other shire council updates
Gippsland students urged to enter National Water Week poster contest by 6 September 2024
Have your say and help develop Trafalgar Structure Plan through online survey by 20 May 2024
Stay vigilant and report scams to IDCare on 1800595160 as over 500,000 Aussies lose $3B in 2022
Tim Bull visits Gallipoli and honours fallen locals such as Basil Hooper, Vern Brookes, Thomas Bell, and Thomas Haylock
Community feedback needed for East Gippsland Shire Council Draft 2024/25 Budget by 29 May 2024
Fresh food tax criticised by industry as lack of clarity on payment and collection will harm families and farmers
Russell Broadbent seeks answers to 20% increase in cardiac arrests by advocating investigation to include vaccine mandates
East Gippsland Shire Council highlights telecommunications infrastructure when advocating over thirty goals for community resilience and development