Landing page iamge of various hazards

Property Report for Exposure to Extreme Events

Simple, localised data that helps you identify if a property is at risk to a changing climate.

Tropical CyclonesDroughtHeatwaveHailDamaging WindsTornadoesExtreme RainfallThunderstormExtreme TemperatureBushfire
Tropical CyclonesDroughtHeatwaveHailDamaging WindsTornadoesExtreme RainfallThunderstormExtreme TemperatureBushfire

Enter your address below to retrieve your property's personalised report

Landing page iamge of various hazards

Custom Reports

Each report will provide the following information specific to the chosen property location:

 

  • A review of historical extreme weather events that have impacted the property,
  • The present climate trends for event intensity, frequency and duration,
  • Comparison of the historical climatological baseline (1961-1990) to present period equivalents,
  • Interactive charts that engage the user to understand what classifies as an 'extreme event',
  • Context of the existing weather and climate records in place,
  • Results that aid the reader to draw conclusions on the overall risk of the properties exposure to climate change and extreme events.

Interactive data

All graphs provided in our reports are visualised as dynamic & interactive Plotly charts. They can hold more information in them then what you can get when just viewing a static picture and are very customisable. Have a try on the example image to the right and see how much you can do:

 

  • Turn legend labels on and off,
  • Get specific values for the points you are most interested in,
  • Move the graph around, zoom in/out and reset,
  • Save as a PNG for use elsewhere,
  • Hover over points for additional context to that data point.

The data used in Climatics Intelligence reports is primarily historical data. We saw that attempting to find historical data on extreme events was displaced over multiple agencies, discontinuous at times, and non-equivalent across jurisdictions. Historical data that is provided by other climate change websites - while readily available - was just not up to scratch for obtaining realistic trends and context on extreme events. Other climate change resources also use historical data but they assimilate the data through a model to place it in a format that they can then run future simulations on. In doing this though, a large amount of localised information is lost as these models require large grid resolutions (50-100km) to be able to run with the computing resources available. As the observations are up-scaled, a significant amount of information is lost about the extreme events that are so important to property and business owners.

 

The data provided by Climatics Intelligence does all the hard work for you to combine the various data sources and derive the important information so you can quickly and easily understand your property's climate context. The data is aimed at being easy to interpret, even for non-scientific individuals, useful for identifying trends quickly, and when combined with your knowledge of the investment, allows for evaluating the hazard that is most relevant to you.

Changes are happening at an increased pace

" the past decade has seen record-breaking extremes leading to natural disasters that are exacerbated by anthropogenic (human-caused) climate change. These changes have a growing impact on the lives and livelihoods of all Australians. Australia needs to plan for, and adapt to, the changing nature of climate risk now "

- State of the Climate Report 2022, Bureau of Meteorology.