Abstract

The Earth’s climate is changing; ice sheets and glaciers are melting and coastal hazards and sea level are rising in response. With a total population of over 300 million people situated on coasts, including 20 of the planet’s 33 megacities (over 10 million people), low-lying coastal areas represent one of the most vulnerable areas to the impacts of climate change. Many of the largest cities along the Atlantic coast of the U.S. are already experiencing frequent high tide flooding, and these events will increase in frequency, depth, duration and extent as sea levels continue to rise at an accelerating rate throughout the 21st century and beyond. Cities in southeast Asia and islands in the Indo-Pacific and Caribbean are also suffering the effects of extreme weather events combined with other factors that increase coastal risk. While short-term extreme events such as hurricanes, El Niños and severe storms come and go and will be more damaging in the short term, sea-level rise is a long-term permanent change of state. However, the effects of sea-level rise are compounded with other hazards, such as increased wave action or a loss of ecosystems. As sea-level rise could lead to the displacement of hundreds of millions of people, this may be one of the greatest challenges that human civilization has ever faced, with associated inundation of major cities, loss of coastal infrastructure, increased saltwater intrusion and damage to coastal aquifers among many other global impacts, as well as geopolitical and legal implications. While there are several short-term responses or adaptation options, we need to begin to think longer term for both public infrastructure and private development. This article provides an overview of the status on adaptation to climate change in coastal zones.

Highlights

  • The climate has been changing for as long as we have had the Earth and the Sun

  • Sea level is intimately tied to ocean warming and climate change

  • During cooler periods, sea level is lowered as seawater cools and takes up less volume, and more precipitation falls as snow freezes to ice and allows ice sheets and glaciers to expand

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Summary

Introduction

Climate changes affect processes and dynamics in coastal zones through interannual and long-term changes in winds, storm surges or wave action [2,3,4,5,6]. Wave power, extreme waves and sea levels [7,8,9,10,11,12] all drive important effects on coastlines. These changes vary between regions and coastlines, from seasonal to interannual and long-term temporal scales, triggering different impacts locally, such as flooding and erosion [3,13,14]. The article aims to provide an overview on coastal adaptation that can provide the reader with a useful document for future reference

Historic Changes in Sea Level
Future Sea Levels
August
How Future Sea-Level Rise Will Affect Coastal Areas
Nuisance
Short-Term Coastal Hazards versus Long-Term Sea-Level Rise
Interannual Changes
Damage
Wave Action
Beach Nourishment
12. Passive front of of a rock revetment in central
Deciding the Strategy andinPlanning
Challenges to Adaptation
Findings
Conclusions
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