Selangor’s flood warning system capable of giving seven-day advance notice will be ready by end of March

Selangor will soon be able to manage future floods more effectively by the end of this month once its flood warning system, which is being revamped, comes on at the end of this month.

State infrastructure and agriculture committee chairman Izham Hashim told The Malaysian Insight that the new system will be able to give a seven-day advance notice and predict which areas are likely to be inundated.

“By the end of this month we will have a system that helps to predict floods seven days in advance, and the areas that will likely be most affected.

“This will help us to prepare better and have rescue teams on alert,” he was quoted as saying by the news portal in a report published today.

Izham said Selangor had learnt from the devastating December floods that submerged many areas last year.

Several other states across the peninsula, including Melaka, Negri Sembilan, Perak and Pahang, experienced unusually high rainfall before and over the weekend of December 17 to 18 that led to massive flooding.

More than 70,000 people were evacuated and 54 were killed in the flooding. Selangor, Malaysia’s most developed state, was reported to record 25 deaths.

Izham told the news portal that the December disaster led the state to review its flood management system.

He said state personnel sent to handle the December flood were themselves trapped on highways or in their flooded homes.

To avoid such problems from recurring, Izham said the state government is working on an automated system for waterway sluice gates.

He said an automated system would enable action to be taken more swiftly.

“With an automated system for our water gates, we don’t need to send people to handle them [manually], as this will take time.

“We are currently working on this and we hope to get it done soon,” he told The Malaysian Insight.

He added that Selangor is also focusing on preparing more electricity generators for emergencies as power stations are often affected during floods.

“This stops our pumps and water gates from working, so the generators have to be in place beforehand to prevent that from happening.

“We are now more experienced and committed to handling any sort of flood in the near future,” he was quoted saying. —  Malay Mail

[ IMAGE SOURCE ]

Recent Posts

Zeekr 009 upgraded for 2026: 900V architecture, 912hp, swiveling seats and 10-80% charge in 10 minutes

Zeekr's flagship MPV, the 009 has gotten a significant technology upgrade in mainland China. This…

15 hours ago

Gentari trials 15% off for off-peak EV charging at select locations

Gentari is introducing an off-peak charging trial that offers cheaper DC Charging at selected locations.…

16 hours ago

JomCharge x DBKL turn on EV chargers at McDonald’s Sri Petaling

JomCharge x DBKL street-level EV charger deployment continues and the latest location is in Sri…

3 days ago

Can you and your family enjoy a 100% electric drive without ever plugging in?

This post is brought to you by Nissan. For many Malaysian families, the idea of…

3 days ago

Gentari’s largest EV Charging Hub in Penang, 540kW total capacity with 6 bays at Bayan Baru

Besides deploying more DC Chargers in Penang Island in partnership with MBPP, Gentari has just…

4 days ago

BMW 7 Series gets Neue Klasse upgrade. New i7 now offers over 700km range and 250kW DC fast charging

BMW has officially revealed the updated 7th generation BMW 7 Series (G70), and this isn’t…

4 days ago

This website uses cookies.