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Climate change and coastal management on Europe’s coast

Climate change and coastal management on Europe’s coast
Climate change and coastal management on Europe’s coast
Climate change and sea-level rise due to human emissions of greenhouse gases is expected to accelerate through the 21st Century. Even given substantial reductions in these emissions, sea-level rise will probably be significant through the 21st Century and beyond. This poses a major challenge to long-term coastal management. While Europe has a high adaptive capacity, climate change will produce problems that have not been faced previously, and solutions need to be reconciled with the wider goals of coastal management. A recent European survey of the current response to sea-level rise and climate change shows a few countries engaged in proactive planning, while most are ignoring the issue, or only beginning to recognise its significance. While a proactive response should minimise the actual impacts and need for reactive responses, ignoring sea-level rise and climate change will almost certainly increase vulnerability. A common theme that emerges is the need for more impact and vulnerability assessment that is relevant to coastal management needs. This should include the consequences of sea-level rise and climate change on coastal areas from the local to the European scale. This will require continued development of broad-scale assessment methods for coastal management. It is also important to assess coastal adaptation and management as a process rather than just focus on the implementation of technical measures. Lastly, the uncertainties of climate change suggest that management should have explicit goals, so that the success or failure of their achievement should be regularly monitored and the management approach adjusted as appropriate.
9783540234548
199-226
Springer Berlin, Heidelberg
Nicholls, R.J.
4ce1e355-cc5d-4702-8124-820932c57076
Klein, R.J.T.
75f784e7-7a40-409f-8e2f-9a58216e8537
Vermaat, J.
Bouwer, K.
Turner, K.
Salomons, W.
Nicholls, R.J.
4ce1e355-cc5d-4702-8124-820932c57076
Klein, R.J.T.
75f784e7-7a40-409f-8e2f-9a58216e8537
Vermaat, J.
Bouwer, K.
Turner, K.
Salomons, W.

Nicholls, R.J. and Klein, R.J.T. (2005) Climate change and coastal management on Europe’s coast. In, Vermaat, J., Bouwer, K., Turner, K. and Salomons, W. (eds.) Managing European Coasts. (Environmental Science) Heidelberg, Germany. Springer Berlin, Heidelberg, pp. 199-226. (doi:10.1007/3-540-27150-3_11).

Record type: Book Section

Abstract

Climate change and sea-level rise due to human emissions of greenhouse gases is expected to accelerate through the 21st Century. Even given substantial reductions in these emissions, sea-level rise will probably be significant through the 21st Century and beyond. This poses a major challenge to long-term coastal management. While Europe has a high adaptive capacity, climate change will produce problems that have not been faced previously, and solutions need to be reconciled with the wider goals of coastal management. A recent European survey of the current response to sea-level rise and climate change shows a few countries engaged in proactive planning, while most are ignoring the issue, or only beginning to recognise its significance. While a proactive response should minimise the actual impacts and need for reactive responses, ignoring sea-level rise and climate change will almost certainly increase vulnerability. A common theme that emerges is the need for more impact and vulnerability assessment that is relevant to coastal management needs. This should include the consequences of sea-level rise and climate change on coastal areas from the local to the European scale. This will require continued development of broad-scale assessment methods for coastal management. It is also important to assess coastal adaptation and management as a process rather than just focus on the implementation of technical measures. Lastly, the uncertainties of climate change suggest that management should have explicit goals, so that the success or failure of their achievement should be regularly monitored and the management approach adjusted as appropriate.

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Published date: 2005

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 53197
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/53197
ISBN: 9783540234548
PURE UUID: 79427916-abc8-404d-b38e-007f08745fad
ORCID for R.J. Nicholls: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9715-1109

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Date deposited: 28 Jul 2008
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:36

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Contributors

Author: R.J. Nicholls ORCID iD
Author: R.J.T. Klein
Editor: J. Vermaat
Editor: K. Bouwer
Editor: K. Turner
Editor: W. Salomons

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