What are flood maps, and why are they important? - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 07:57 PM | Calgary | -11.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Montreal

What are flood maps, and why are they important?

Used by urban planners and for disaster planning, it's critical to have up-to-date maps. Montreal doesn't.

Used by urban planners and for disaster planning, it's critical to have up-to-date maps. Montreal doesn't

The only up-to-date flood maps for the Montreal area cover the Lake of Two Mountains and the Mille les River. For most of the Montreal island's shoreline, there is no current data. (Sources: Centre d'expertise hydrique du Qubec and Google Maps)

Flood maps are important tools for urban planners, civil security agenciesand residents. They help home buyers measure the risk of owning properties on or near waterfrontand help insurance companies calculate premiums for those properties.

For all those reasons, it's important to have up-to-date flood maps that take into account climate patterns and changes to land use.

How are flood maps made?

To measure areas that are prone to flooding, complex calculations are made that take into account historical floods, changing river levels and flow rates, as well asthe elevation of land.

With these numbers, experts come up with two scenarios:

  • The 20-year flood plain, or zones where there is a five per cent chance of a flood in any given year.

  • The 100-year flood plain, or zones where there is a one per cent chance of a flood in any given year.

Here's the current flood map for Cap-Saint-Jacques and L'Anse--l'OrmeNature Park in the West Island. The light red zone is the 20-year flood plain, and the dark red zone is the 100-year flood plain.

Compare it with the actual extent of the recent floods, according to satellite images released by the Quebec government.

Who makes flood maps?

There is no standard for the creation of flood maps in Quebec.In some cases, municipalities may commission their own maps. In other cases, they could be produced by the provincial government.

For the Montrealarea, they are made by the Montreal Metropolitan Community (CMM), a council that includes municipalities on the islandof Montreal, Laval and on the South and North Shores.

All flood maps in the province are collected and distributed by the Quebec Environment Ministry, which sells the digitized versions for $111.

What kinds of flood maps are available in Montreal?

Montreal's flood maps include very little up-to-date and useful data.

The only maps that are current cover the Lake of Two Mountains and the Mille les River between Laval and the North Shore.

Flood information websitesforboth the City of Montrealand the Quebec government offer printable maps in PDF format for much of the Ottawa and St. Lawrence rivers.

There are no flood maps for most of Montreal's shoreline.

Flood maps for the Lake of Two Mountains and the Mille les River were the only ones made with new data in 2006. For the Rivire des Prairies, the flood maps were made in the 80s and are no longer fit for planning. (Sources: Centre d'expertise hydrique du Qubec and Google Maps)

Another city website with flood information contains a map that is so small,it's impossible to see detailed flood plains.

Compare this with public, easy-to-find flood maps for Manhattan and for all of France.

The Quebec government does have archived flood maps for the Rivire des Prairieswhich the CBC obtained. They were created in the 1980s and taken out of circulation around 2006, when new studies on flood risks were done.

But new maps have not been created for this area with the latest data, which is already 11 years old.

To show how out of date they are, here's how they compare to the actual extent of current floodingat the western tip of Pierrefonds:

Compare this outdated map to the actual flooding onan eastern sector near Saint-Jean Boulevard:

So there are no maps for Pierrefonds. What information is available?

The latest usable data are projections for how high the river would rise in these theoretical 20-year and 100-year zones. But these numbers are just the start; they're one of several ingredients for usable flood maps.

The most recent projection of a flood in the 100-year zone on the Rivire des Prairiespredicts it couldrise to 24.42 metres. During the highest peak of the flood, on May 8, it rose more than 20 centimetrespast that projection.