U28/388 David Low Way, Peregian Beach QLD 4573, Australia
Address-level climate-risk read for U28/388 David Low Way, Peregian Beach QLD 4573, Australia. Lat -26.46532, lon 153.09904. Cohort cell 1km-se-qld-00257-00337. Updated daily as new data lands in the Marenn data lake.
Per-peril breakdown
| Peril | This property | Resolution | Cohort context |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bushfire Five signals at the property pin: BPA membership and 50 m adjacency, QFD VHC fuel-load, fire-scar 50 m adjacency and FIRMS detections within 5 km.How this peril is scored → |
28/100 Moderate | Per-property | Block median 44 · max 67 · n=677 pins |
| Storm & hail AURA 1 km radar-cell mosaic across the Gympie, Marburg and Stapylton radars, ~850 M tile observations, 1999 to present.How this peril is scored → |
32/100 Moderate | 1 km block | Cohort 87th percentile of 180 |
| Cyclone Tropical-cyclone wind exposure from the BoM track archive (IBTrACS) within striking distance of the property.How this peril is scored → |
31/100 Moderate | 1 km block | Cohort 15th percentile of 180 |
| Flood DEA Water Observations from Space (Landsat archive 1986 to present, 30 m) as the primary signal, with council overlays as regulatory floor and SILO rainfall extremes as fallback.How this peril is scored → |
0/100 Low | Per-property | Block median 0 · max 40 · n=677 pins |
| Erosion & Inundation DEA Coastlines measured shoreline rate-of-change (1988 to present) plus QLD Coastal Management overlays as regulatory floor, including SLR inundation up tidal estuaries.How this peril is scored → |
70/100 High | Per-property | Block median 18 · max 70 · n=677 pins (above block median) |
| Storm vegetation QFD Vegetation Hazard Class fuel-load at the pin (and 50 m / 200 m adjacency) plus Sentinel-2 NDVI dieback against the 2-5 year baseline.How this peril is scored → |
40/100 Moderate | Per-property | Block median 30 · max 95 · n=677 pins (above block median) |
| Subsidence CSIRO Soil and Landscape Grid shrink-swell class for the 1 km cell, adjusted for build era (AS 2870 slab class).How this peril is scored → |
25/100 Moderate | 1 km block | Cohort 3rd percentile of 180 |
What this means for U28/388 David Low Way
U28/388 David Low Way, Peregian Beach QLD 4573, Australia carries a Marenn Score of 37/100, classified as moderate. The headline is a weighted power-mean across seven perils, with property-pin reads on bushfire, flood, erosion and inundation and storm vegetation and 1 km cohort reads on cyclone, storm and hail and subsidence.
The dominant peril at this address is Erosion & Inundation at 70/100, followed by Storm vegetation at 40/100. The per-peril table above breaks down which reads are property-pin and which are 1 km cohort context.
U28/388 David Low Way sits in the Peregian Beach part of the Noosa Shire local government area. Marenn recomputes pin-level scores daily from the underlying public datasets (radar, satellite, fire detections, council overlays). See the methodology page for sources, refresh cadence and how to request a correction.
Get the full Marenn Risk Report
This page shows the public summary. Your full Marenn Risk Report layers in property-specific reads: parcel boundary, aerial change-detection, Street View frontage, BoM warnings history, fire-scar proximity, climate-mesh microtrend, plain-language AI summary. Free, no obligation.
Get the full report →How this score is calculated
Marenn scores seven perils from public hazard datasets: the Queensland Bushfire Prone Area overlay and the Vegetation Hazard Class map for bushfire; DEA Water Observations from Space plus Noosa and Sunshine Coast Council flood studies for flood; DEA Coastlines plus the Queensland Coastal Management dataset for erosion and inundation; the Queensland Fire Department's vegetation map and Sentinel-2 satellite greenness for storm vegetation; the Bureau of Meteorology's AURA radar archive for storm and hail; the Bureau's tropical cyclone archive for cyclone; the CSIRO Soil and Landscape Grid for subsidence. The composite combines the seven peril scores using a weighted power mean that lets the worst peril drive the result. Weights are anchored to McAneney et al. (2019) "Normalised insurance losses from Australian natural disasters: 1966–2017" (peer-reviewed, open-access) with documented South-East Queensland adjustments: storm and hail 28, flood 20, bushfire 15, cyclone 10, subsidence 10, storm vegetation 9, erosion and inundation 8.
Four of the seven perils are scored at the precise property pin. The other three are scored at the 1 km block containing the pin, where the underlying physical data is genuinely at that resolution (radar pixel, soil class, cyclone wind field). Each row in the table above carries an honest resolution tag. Sources, refresh cadence, banding thresholds and how to request a correction are documented on the Marenn methodology page.