Lecture 14: Coastal protection and future adaptation strategies Flashcards
Name the four adaptation strategies.
Protect open
protect closed
Advance
Accommodate
Explain the key principles of the ‘protect open’ scenario.
Hard and soft measures: traditional flood defenses
o keep the sea open
o open connection with the sea
o Dams
o Soft and naturebased solutions
o Higher dikes and flood defences
o Enough space for super dikes? Public resistance? Catastrophic damage if something goes wrong?
Explain the key principles of the ‘protect closed’ scenario.
o Comparable with protect open
o Dutch coast through flooding and erosion with barriers and storm surge barriers
o Large pumping stations how to construct super pumping stations and water retention areas
o Handles More sea level rise than protect open.
Key characteristics of the ‘Advance’ strategy
o Water border in front of the present coastline
Dikes and stuff
Also airports and urbanization there
o Closed strategy
o Innovative land reclamation: Singapore and Dubai palms (inspired by Dutch Flevo concept)
o Availability of sand is a thing
o Sea level could rise faster than what is available with this
Key characteristics of the ‘Accommodate’ strategy
o Water and soil as key principles
o Creating water and salt tolerlant land use areas
o Raising land elevation / terps
o Much more space for the rivers
Which types of management responses to coastal risk and sea level rise does the IPCC distinguish, and how have these been translated to the Dutch situation?
THe IPCC distinguishes ‘no response, advance, protection, retreat, accommodation and ecosystem-based adaptation’. This is translated into the dutch strategies as well. The dutch strategies include:
* advance,
* protection,
* accommodation/ecosystembased adaptation
What are differences between the IPCC strategies and the Dutch adaptation strategies?
A difference is the ecosystem-based adaptation in IPCC, this is integrated in one of the Dutch strategies but is not as explicit.
Also the strategy ‘no response’ is not an option in the Dutch adaptation strategies, as it is with IPCC.
Also ‘Retreating’ is not one of the key points in the Dutch strategies as it is with IPCC.
What are key (dis)advantages of the ‘protect open’ adaptation strategy?
Advantages:
* Increased safety with stronger dikes
* open conneciton with sea
Disadvantages:
* super dikes require much space
* public resistance maybe?
* catastrophic damage if something actually goes wrong
What are key (dis)advantages of the ‘protect-closed’ adaptation strategy?
Advantages:
* Dutch coast is protected for floodings and erosion with barriers and storm surge barriers
* handles a big sea level rise (more than protect open)
Disadvantages:
* How are super pumping stations and large water retention areas gonna be constructed?
* Huge damage when something goes wrong
What are key (dis)advantages of the ‘advance’ adaptation strategy?
Advantages:
* development potential (new cities and airports etc…)
* extra defensive border along the actual coastline
* innovative form of land reclamation
Disadvantages:
* costs a lot of sand and money in general
* Sea level could rise faster than what is available with this
What are key (dis)advantages of the ‘accommodate’ adaptation strategy?
Advantages:
* water and salt tolerant land use areas.
* a lot of space for the river
Disadvantages:
* a lot of existing land could cease to exist.
Why did criticism on the conventional engineering approach emerge?
ecological functions and the role of natural dynamics were overlooked. –> the engineers were looked at as ‘landscape destroyers’.
Engineers and ecologists started to work together.
What is the ‘nature-based approach’ in the sense of climate adaptation?
Promoting nature as a means for providing solutions to climate mitigation and adaptation challenges.
What are nature based solutions?
Nature-based solutions are engineering designs for societal challenges stemming from the understanding of natural ecosystems and their functions and services and making use of these natural and environmental assets
Example of nature based solution in estuaries, deltas or coastal lagoons?
Creation or restoration of large tidal marshes (wetlands) of mangroves to provide extra water storage areas.