Stories

Insights & Local Market Commentary Click on any title to read the story

Beachmere

Resilience Planning in Beachmere Enters Key Stage

Beachmere residents are confronting some of Queensland’s toughest natural hazards as a local resilience plan begins shaping how the coastal town will respond to floods, cyclones, bushfires, and the threat of rising seas. The project, led by the City of Moreton Bay, is now in its first stage of raising awareness and identifying what dangers the community faces.

Community at the centre of planning

The Beachmere Local Resilience Plan attempts to reduce risks to people, property, and community assets by identifying hazards that might disrupt daily operations and describing strategies to enhance responses. The objective is to ensure that the community can recover from disruptions more quickly and prepare for major disasters, such as tidal inundation or severe storms.

A project information sheet published in August 2025 lists the main risks that have already been identified. Bushfires, severe storms and cyclones, heat waves, erosion and tidal inundation, flooding from heavy rain and storm surges, and long-term sea level rise are among the threats. Concerns about being cut off from neighboring towns during severe weather when road closures take place have also been voiced by locals.

Why the plan matters

Beachmere’s low-lying location on the shore makes it particularly vulnerable to climate-related hazards. While bushfire and heatwave hazards are predicted to increase as summers get hotter and drier, flooding is threatened by rising sea levels and intense storms. The resilience plan aims to enhance local facilities and services that the entire community relies on, while also empowering individuals to make informed decisions for their homes and businesses.

The plan is also designed to help residents connect with one another. A socially connected community is better able to respond during emergencies and recover afterwards. This means that local networks, volunteer groups, and support services are being considered as part of the strategy, alongside physical protections such as improved drainage or coastal management works.

Beachmere Resilience Plan
Photo Credit: City of Moreton Bay

The purpose of the engagement programs is to provide Beachmere residents with a chance to share their personal stories. Locals have been invited to identify areas where their streets have been impacted by erosion or flooding, explain the effects of heat waves or power outages, and offer suggestions for ways to make their roads safer. Council officers and specialists are facilitating roundtables to test solutions and get input.

While formal analysis is still underway, early documents show that residents are already thinking about how to manage both immediate risks and longer-term changes. The plan’s success will depend on tailoring strategies to Beachmere’s unique circumstances, and participation will help ensure solutions are locally relevant.

Where the plan stands now

As of September 2025, the project is positioned in its early analysis stage, known as “What’s the problem?” According to the official timeline, this step is dedicated to understanding current and future impacts from natural hazards on Beachmere. At the same time, Council has already undertaken broad hazard studies through the Living Coast Plan, which drills into Beachmere-specific vulnerabilities in the local plan.

The entire assessment has not yet been made public, although residents have been invited to participate through a 5-minute online survey and community roundtable discussions. Council asserts that establishing a shared understanding of the elements that make Beachmere most vulnerable, such as flood hotspots and coastal erosion, requires community knowledge.

Photo Credit: City of Moreton Bay

The roadmap states that the main objective of the upcoming phase, scheduled for November 2025, will be to create a shared vision. The community’s priorities and what constitutes a resilient future for Beachmere will be outlined in this step.

In February 2026, the plan will progress to identifying pathways for achieving that vision. This will involve examining options for private homes, public buildings, infrastructure, and community networks.

Draft findings will later be released for consultation, with further opportunities for residents to respond before the plan is finalised. Implementation support will follow, continuing beyond 2026 as resilience measures are introduced.