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Benefits of subsidence control for coastal flooding in China

Benefits of subsidence control for coastal flooding in China
Benefits of subsidence control for coastal flooding in China
Land subsidence is impacting large populations in coastal Asia via relative sea-level rise (RSLR). Here we assesses these risks and possible response strategies for China, including estimates of present rates of RSLR, flood exposure and risk to 2050. In 2015, each Chinese coastal resident experienced on average RSLR of 11 to 20 mm/yr. This is 3 to 5 times higher than climate-induced SLR, reflecting that people are concentrated in subsiding locations. In 2050, assuming these subsidence rates continue, land area, population and assets exposed to the 100-year coastal flood event is 20%-39%, 17%-37% and 18%-39% higher than assuming climate change alone, respectively. Realistic subsidence control measures can avoid up to two thirds of this additional growth in exposure, with adaptation required to address the residual. This analysis emphasizes subsidence as a RSLR hazard in China that requires a broad-scale policy response, utilizing subsidence control combined with coastal adaptation.
2041-1723
Fang, Jiayi
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Nicholls, Robert
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Brown, Sally
dd3c5852-78cc-435a-9846-4f3f540f2840
Lincke, Daniel
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Hinkel, Jochen
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Vafeidis, Athanasios
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Du, Shiqiang
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Zhao, Qing
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Liu, Min
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Shi, Peijun
cc44b76f-3bfb-47ec-a98f-1ce8509b9333
Fang, Jiayi
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Nicholls, Robert
4ce1e355-cc5d-4702-8124-820932c57076
Brown, Sally
dd3c5852-78cc-435a-9846-4f3f540f2840
Lincke, Daniel
285d4d3b-3bf1-4bd5-8cd6-6e71f3dfddf1
Hinkel, Jochen
579f5aa4-a351-4b91-bd83-50e1295560c6
Vafeidis, Athanasios
e4b46692-c6eb-46d2-8de0-8764d731dd5f
Du, Shiqiang
4ec891dd-c4d7-4cad-9ca8-9d0750b37119
Zhao, Qing
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Liu, Min
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Shi, Peijun
cc44b76f-3bfb-47ec-a98f-1ce8509b9333

Fang, Jiayi, Nicholls, Robert, Brown, Sally, Lincke, Daniel, Hinkel, Jochen, Vafeidis, Athanasios, Du, Shiqiang, Zhao, Qing, Liu, Min and Shi, Peijun (2022) Benefits of subsidence control for coastal flooding in China. Nature Communications, 13 (1), [6946]. (doi:10.1038/s41467-022-34525-w).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Land subsidence is impacting large populations in coastal Asia via relative sea-level rise (RSLR). Here we assesses these risks and possible response strategies for China, including estimates of present rates of RSLR, flood exposure and risk to 2050. In 2015, each Chinese coastal resident experienced on average RSLR of 11 to 20 mm/yr. This is 3 to 5 times higher than climate-induced SLR, reflecting that people are concentrated in subsiding locations. In 2050, assuming these subsidence rates continue, land area, population and assets exposed to the 100-year coastal flood event is 20%-39%, 17%-37% and 18%-39% higher than assuming climate change alone, respectively. Realistic subsidence control measures can avoid up to two thirds of this additional growth in exposure, with adaptation required to address the residual. This analysis emphasizes subsidence as a RSLR hazard in China that requires a broad-scale policy response, utilizing subsidence control combined with coastal adaptation.

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Accepted/In Press date: 27 October 2022
Published date: 14 November 2022
Additional Information: © 2022. The Author(s).

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 483331
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/483331
ISSN: 2041-1723
PURE UUID: 2cecd36e-157f-4d94-b9d9-4f9751c85b89
ORCID for Robert Nicholls: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9715-1109
ORCID for Sally Brown: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1185-1962

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Date deposited: 30 Oct 2023 04:16
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:15

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Contributors

Author: Jiayi Fang
Author: Robert Nicholls ORCID iD
Author: Sally Brown ORCID iD
Author: Daniel Lincke
Author: Jochen Hinkel
Author: Athanasios Vafeidis
Author: Shiqiang Du
Author: Qing Zhao
Author: Min Liu
Author: Peijun Shi

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