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Risk assessment of estuaries under climate change: Lessons from Western Europe

Risk assessment of estuaries under climate change: Lessons from Western Europe
Risk assessment of estuaries under climate change: Lessons from Western Europe
Climate change with rising sea levels and possible changes in surge levels and wave climate will have a large impact on how we protect our coastal areas and cities. Here the focus is on estuarine locations not only affected by tide and surge propagation, but also potentially influenced by freshwater discharge. Mitigation measures might be diverse ranging from pure hard ‘engineering’ solutions all the way to significant realignment. The variation in the type/origin and extent of the flood sources greatly influences subsequent risk management measures. At the same time, society is increasingly demanding that we take a holistic view on risk management, embracing and balancing safety, ecological and socio-economic aspects. This requires that all these diverse factors need to be considered together and integrated. In this context, the Source–Pathway–Receptor (SPR) approach offers a powerful holistic tool to investigate changing risk connected to extreme events.

The traditional SPR approach with a consecutive treatment of the flood, pathway and receptor is well understood and is widely used in coastal flood risk analysis. Here an enhanced 2D conceptual version of the SPR method is used to better describe the system and to allow flexibility in considering multiple scales, flood sources and pathways. The new approach is demonstrated by three estuarine case studies in western Europe: the Gironde estuary, France; the Dendermonde region in the Scheldt estuary, Belgium; and HafenCity (Hamburg) in the Elbe estuary, Germany. They differ considerably in the surface area considered, in the type of flood sources, and hence also in the SPR configuration. After a brief introduction of the typical characteristics of the three study sites including some lessons learned from past flood protection measures, the differences in application and results of the SPR approach are discussed. Emphasis is on the specific aspects for each study site, but embedded in a generic SPR framework. The resulting generic lessons learned about the flood sources and how this shapes subsequent analysis are transferable to numerous important estuaries worldwide.
0378-3839
32-49
Monbaliu, J.
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Chen, Z.
514cf4cd-7fe7-41bb-bf18-522b5c2799dd
Felts, D.
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Ge, J.
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Hissel, F.
fcc5c143-42a4-49c1-a7b5-45f35d347013
Kappenberg, J.
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Narayan, Siddharth
ea51a94c-b3e0-419a-9b15-a25919ae9258
Nicholls, R.J.
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Ohle, N.
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Schuster, D.
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Willems, J.
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Monbaliu, J.
12be3ac0-8802-425f-b6ab-bf72d2d171dc
Chen, Z.
514cf4cd-7fe7-41bb-bf18-522b5c2799dd
Felts, D.
b811e897-3731-46d8-9bfd-d610ef0d5ed4
Ge, J.
3dfdb072-6970-4eca-8fe1-1cc91964b263
Hissel, F.
fcc5c143-42a4-49c1-a7b5-45f35d347013
Kappenberg, J.
45b8c1d0-d8d9-4021-83b8-11d1a778864a
Narayan, Siddharth
ea51a94c-b3e0-419a-9b15-a25919ae9258
Nicholls, R.J.
4ce1e355-cc5d-4702-8124-820932c57076
Ohle, N.
f2ee47d0-8a4b-4193-9f14-5131dcad10c4
Schuster, D.
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Willems, J.
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Monbaliu, J., Chen, Z., Felts, D., Ge, J., Hissel, F., Kappenberg, J., Narayan, Siddharth, Nicholls, R.J., Ohle, N., Schuster, D. and Willems, J. (2014) Risk assessment of estuaries under climate change: Lessons from Western Europe. Coastal Engineering, 87, 32-49. (doi:10.1016/j.coastaleng.2014.01.001). (In Press)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Climate change with rising sea levels and possible changes in surge levels and wave climate will have a large impact on how we protect our coastal areas and cities. Here the focus is on estuarine locations not only affected by tide and surge propagation, but also potentially influenced by freshwater discharge. Mitigation measures might be diverse ranging from pure hard ‘engineering’ solutions all the way to significant realignment. The variation in the type/origin and extent of the flood sources greatly influences subsequent risk management measures. At the same time, society is increasingly demanding that we take a holistic view on risk management, embracing and balancing safety, ecological and socio-economic aspects. This requires that all these diverse factors need to be considered together and integrated. In this context, the Source–Pathway–Receptor (SPR) approach offers a powerful holistic tool to investigate changing risk connected to extreme events.

The traditional SPR approach with a consecutive treatment of the flood, pathway and receptor is well understood and is widely used in coastal flood risk analysis. Here an enhanced 2D conceptual version of the SPR method is used to better describe the system and to allow flexibility in considering multiple scales, flood sources and pathways. The new approach is demonstrated by three estuarine case studies in western Europe: the Gironde estuary, France; the Dendermonde region in the Scheldt estuary, Belgium; and HafenCity (Hamburg) in the Elbe estuary, Germany. They differ considerably in the surface area considered, in the type of flood sources, and hence also in the SPR configuration. After a brief introduction of the typical characteristics of the three study sites including some lessons learned from past flood protection measures, the differences in application and results of the SPR approach are discussed. Emphasis is on the specific aspects for each study site, but embedded in a generic SPR framework. The resulting generic lessons learned about the flood sources and how this shapes subsequent analysis are transferable to numerous important estuaries worldwide.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 1 May 2014
Organisations: Energy & Climate Change Group

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 364214
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/364214
ISSN: 0378-3839
PURE UUID: ebd7b7e8-8002-4674-8625-cd360c1b4f7f
ORCID for R.J. Nicholls: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9715-1109

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Date deposited: 10 Apr 2014 08:21
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:18

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Contributors

Author: J. Monbaliu
Author: Z. Chen
Author: D. Felts
Author: J. Ge
Author: F. Hissel
Author: J. Kappenberg
Author: Siddharth Narayan
Author: R.J. Nicholls ORCID iD
Author: N. Ohle
Author: D. Schuster
Author: J. Willems

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