CSIRO Scientist Pushes Back on Greens’ Flood Claims

by | Sep 4, 2025 | News | 1 comment

The CSIRO’s Chief Scientist responsible for flood resilience planning in the Northern Rivers has rejected claims that “nature-based solutions” are being ignored.

Greens councillors at Ballina Shire and Rous County Councils recently argued that the current shortlist for consultation consists only of engineering projects. They tried unsuccessfully to move motions calling for more ecological measures to be added.

But Dr Jai Vaze told The Byron Bay Echo that three nature-based projects were funded in the first round of flood works after the 2022 disaster.

“They are already being implemented and we are waiting on results,” he said.

 “The current shortlist reflects the projects that require detailed hydrodynamic modelling, not those already funded.”

Dr Vaze, pictured with Mayor Sharon Cadwallader at the recent Ballina consultation

Research backs ecological measures

Dr Vaze is no opponent of ecological approaches. He recently peer reviewed a landmark study from the Australian National University looking at the effectiveness of nature-based flood solutions.

The study found that measures such as large-scale tree planting can help reduce flood peaks, depending on the catchment.

South Ballina Flood Channels

One controversial idea raised during community submissions is the opening of creeks south of Ballina to allow Richmond River floodwaters to flow directly to the ocean.

Dr Vaze said this was not a CSIRO proposal but a suggestion that came from the community during Phase One of the project.

“Boundary Creek and others have always acted as natural outflows during major floods,” he said. 

“Any intervention would require a detailed business case and environmental assessment before funding decisions are made.”

Bagotville barrage concerns

Critics have also claimed that upgrading the Bagotville barrage could worsen fish kills in the Tuckean Swamp. Dr Vaze said the intent was the opposite.

“The proposal is for a new control gate to prevent floodwater stagnation,” he explained.

 “It is that stagnation which leads to blackwater events and oxygen depletion.

“The aim is to improve flows, not worsen them.”

Assessments still to come

As previously reported by Ballina News Daily, all shortlisted projects will need full environmental assessments before proceeding.

Dr Vaze emphasised that CSIRO’s role is limited to science and modelling.

“We provide the evidence; government makes the policy and funding decisions.”

Looking ahead

A full catchment-scale flood model was released in June, confirming it can replicate past flood events across the Richmond catchment.

Over the next year, CSIRO will test “bundles of options” to identify which combinations best reduce flood heights without creating unintended impacts.

Findings are due in mid-2026.

Dr Vaze added that CSIRO is liaising with the Northern Rivers Watershed Initiative on soil health, water quality and revegetation.

“The aim is to bring the basin back closer to natural conditions,” he said. 

“But no single measure, ecological or engineered, will prevent another catastrophic flood on its own.”

Rod Bruem

Rod Bruem

Rod Bruem began his career as a cadet journalist at the Lithgow Mercury in 1985 and went on to work in other regional daily newspapers, radio and TV, including time at Australia’s top newsroom at TCN9 Sydney. Bruem has advised Federal independent and LNP Ministers and MPs and spent nearly two decades as a corporate communications adviser to Telstra. Rod moved to the Ballina region in 2014, publishing a national travel magazine and later becoming breakfast host at 101.9 Paradise FM. From 2022 he served a term as councillor on Ballina Shire Council and the Rous County Council before leaving to co-found the Ballina News Daily.

1 Comment

  1. Helen

    This detail he is now reporting about the Bagotville Barrage was not available to us when we were asked to vote on it. That is exactly why this voting process was flawed.

    Reply

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