Coastal landfills and rising sea levels: a challenge for the 21st century
Coastal landfills and rising sea levels: a challenge for the 21st century
Populated coastal areas worldwide have a legacy of numerous solid waste disposal sites. At the same time, mean sea level is rising and likely to accelerate, increasing flooding and/or erosion. There is therefore concern that landfill sites located at and near the coast pose a growing risk to the environment from the potential release of liquid and solid waste materials. This paper aims to assess our present understanding of this issue as well as research and practice needs by synthesizing the available evidence across a set of developed country cases, comprising England, France, Germany, the Netherlands, and the United States (Florida). Common insights gained here include: (1) a lack of data and limited appreciation of waste release from coastal landfill as a potential problem; (2) recognition of the scale and diversity of coastal landfill waste within a range of generic settings (or situations); and (3) a lack of robust protocols that allow the impact of different categories of waste release to the coast to be assessed in a consistent and evidence-based manner, most particularly for solid waste. Hence, a need for greater understanding of the following issues is identified: (1) the amount, character and impact of waste that could be released from landfill sites; (2) the acceptability and regulation of waste eroding from coastal landfills; (3) present and future erosion rates at landfill sites suggesting the need for more monitoring and relevant predictive tools; (4) the full range of possible management methods for dealing with waste release from landfills and the science to support them; and (5) relevant long-term funding mechanisms to address this issue. The main focus and experience of current management practice has been protection/retention, or removal of landfills, with limited consideration of other feasible solutions and how they might be facilitated. Approaches to assess and address solid waste release to the marine/coastal environment represent a particular gap. Lastly, as solid waste will persist indefinitely and sea levels will rise for many centuries, the long timescale of this issue needs wider appreciation and should be included in coastal and waste policy.
erosion, flood, landfill, sea-level rise, waste
Nicholls, Robert
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Beaven, R.P.
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Stringfellow, Anne
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Monfort, Daniel
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Le Cozannet,, Gonéri
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Wahl, Thomas
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Gebert, Julia
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Wadey, Matthew
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Arns, Arne
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Spencer, Kate
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Reinhart, Debra
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Heimovaara, Timo
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Santos, Victor Malagon
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Enríquez, Alejandra R.
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Cope, Samantha. N
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30 September 2021
Nicholls, Robert
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Beaven, R.P.
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Stringfellow, Anne
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Monfort, Daniel
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Le Cozannet,, Gonéri
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Wahl, Thomas
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Gebert, Julia
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Wadey, Matthew
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Arns, Arne
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Spencer, Kate
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Reinhart, Debra
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Heimovaara, Timo
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Santos, Victor Malagon
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Enríquez, Alejandra R.
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Cope, Samantha. N
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Nicholls, Robert, Beaven, R.P., Stringfellow, Anne, Monfort, Daniel, Le Cozannet,, Gonéri, Wahl, Thomas, Gebert, Julia, Wadey, Matthew, Arns, Arne, Spencer, Kate, Reinhart, Debra, Heimovaara, Timo, Santos, Victor Malagon, Enríquez, Alejandra R. and Cope, Samantha. N
(2021)
Coastal landfills and rising sea levels: a challenge for the 21st century.
Frontiers in Marine Science, 8, [710342].
(doi:10.3389/fmars.2021.710342).
Abstract
Populated coastal areas worldwide have a legacy of numerous solid waste disposal sites. At the same time, mean sea level is rising and likely to accelerate, increasing flooding and/or erosion. There is therefore concern that landfill sites located at and near the coast pose a growing risk to the environment from the potential release of liquid and solid waste materials. This paper aims to assess our present understanding of this issue as well as research and practice needs by synthesizing the available evidence across a set of developed country cases, comprising England, France, Germany, the Netherlands, and the United States (Florida). Common insights gained here include: (1) a lack of data and limited appreciation of waste release from coastal landfill as a potential problem; (2) recognition of the scale and diversity of coastal landfill waste within a range of generic settings (or situations); and (3) a lack of robust protocols that allow the impact of different categories of waste release to the coast to be assessed in a consistent and evidence-based manner, most particularly for solid waste. Hence, a need for greater understanding of the following issues is identified: (1) the amount, character and impact of waste that could be released from landfill sites; (2) the acceptability and regulation of waste eroding from coastal landfills; (3) present and future erosion rates at landfill sites suggesting the need for more monitoring and relevant predictive tools; (4) the full range of possible management methods for dealing with waste release from landfills and the science to support them; and (5) relevant long-term funding mechanisms to address this issue. The main focus and experience of current management practice has been protection/retention, or removal of landfills, with limited consideration of other feasible solutions and how they might be facilitated. Approaches to assess and address solid waste release to the marine/coastal environment represent a particular gap. Lastly, as solid waste will persist indefinitely and sea levels will rise for many centuries, the long timescale of this issue needs wider appreciation and should be included in coastal and waste policy.
Text
COASTAL LANDFILLS AND RISING SEA LEVELS A CHALLENGE FOR THE 21ST CENTURY_resubmission Final_clean
- Accepted Manuscript
Text
fmars-08-710342
- Version of Record
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 30 August 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 30 September 2021
Published date: 30 September 2021
Additional Information:
Funding Information:
RN, RB, and AS were supported by the UK’s Natural Environment Research Council’s (NE/N012909/1). DM was supported by the support policy-makers project from the French Environment Ministry and he also thanks the support of C. Cousin (BRGM). TW acknowledges support by the National Science Foundation (Grant Number 1854896). KS acknowledges support from the Environment Agency and from the UK’s Natural Environment Research Council (NE/I018212/1). This
Publisher Copyright:
© Copyright © 2021 Nicholls, Beaven, Stringfellow, Monfort, Le Cozannet, Wahl, Gebert, Wadey, Arns, Spencer, Reinhart, Heimovaara, Santos, Enríquez and Cope.
Keywords:
erosion, flood, landfill, sea-level rise, waste
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 451308
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/451308
ISSN: 2296-7745
PURE UUID: 380fe0f8-d715-4561-aca0-d67532fc992b
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Date deposited: 20 Sep 2021 16:32
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 02:58
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Contributors
Author:
Daniel Monfort
Author:
Gonéri Le Cozannet,
Author:
Thomas Wahl
Author:
Julia Gebert
Author:
Matthew Wadey
Author:
Arne Arns
Author:
Kate Spencer
Author:
Debra Reinhart
Author:
Timo Heimovaara
Author:
Victor Malagon Santos
Author:
Alejandra R. Enríquez
Author:
Samantha. N Cope
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