@CharAzn: I am starting to understand why you are so disliked. You come across trying to be "logical" but use misleading data points. Example, your quote on 3 floods in the last decade (pointed out by your buddy, dankos)... We have 3 serious floods recently, of which, the last two 2, have resulted in Orchard road flooding. What do you mean "lack of precedence"? Back in the 80s, there was a severe flood in Bukit Timah, which after rectification works, did not occur again until recently. JB was raining too, but we don't see JB central flooding.
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On to more important matters:
"The Marina Barrage is part of a comprehensive flood control scheme to alleviate flooding in the low-lying areas in the city such as Chinatown, Boat Quay, Jalan Besar and Geylang.
During heavy rain, the series of nine crest gates at the dam will be activated to release excess storm water into the sea when the tide is low. In the case of high tide, giant pumps which are capable of pumping an Olympics-size swimming pool per minutewill drain excess storm water into the sea. As the water in the Marina Basin is unaffected by the tides, its water level will be kept constant all year round. This is ideal for all kinds of recreational activities such as boating, windsurfing, kayaking and dragonboating etc.
http://www.pub.gov.sg/Marina/Pages/3-in-1-benefits.aspx#fc
My question is... are we sure that the pumps are sufficient in case of heavy rainfall over a widespread area?
One Olympic pool is about 2,500 cubic metres or 2.5 million litres. Marina Barrage pumps can discharge 1 millimeters(mm) of rain water collected over a 25 square kilometre radius every minute. Singapore's land area is 710 square kilometres. This is what we know.
According to PUB, 65mm of rain fell within 30 minutes. This was "worse" than the last time when 100mm of rain fell within 2 hours. They should use the same time period so comparisons can be standardised. Not use different time periods to mislead the public.
Source: (
http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/singaporelocalnews/view/1133345/1/.html
What we have to find out... How much catchment area does the Marina Barrage cover? How much more pumping capacity is needed at the barrage? If pumping capacity is limited, is it feasible to keep the water level at the Marina Barrage lower since they have the ability to keep the water level constant? This way, you build in a margin of safety.
Now bear in mind, these points are made very quickly by a HDB dwelling non-scholar who likes to spew vulgarities . So, I am sure our Minister and his highly paid and qualified scholar team should be able to come out with much better points and solutions. Hopefully we can see something before the next flood?