Abstract

Jakarta has been experiencing severe land subsidence over the last few decades. A questionnaire survey of local inhabitants revealed that seawater is already overtopping coastal dykes and flooding a vulnerable community along Jakarta’s waterfront. The present study projects coastal floods around Jakarta until the year 2050 to understand the long term effectiveness of proposed dykes under continuing rapid land subsidence scenarios. This is done through a hydrodynamic model that considers land subsidence, sea-level rise, and tides. The analysis confirms that, if high enough, coastal dykes will help to prevent flooding, though their effectiveness will eventually disappear as land subsidence continues. For example, a 3-m dyke, which is expected to be sufficiently high to cope with present-day conditions, could completely lose its ability to stop floods by the year 2040. Moreover, higher dykes can also bring about other problems, because if they are overtopped, they actually prolong flooding, essentially trapping a higher volume of water inland. On the other hand, a small 1-m dyke can be expected to stop coastal floods if land subsidence can be stopped. This study demonstrates that actions to stop land subsidence would be the most effective countermeasure to mitigate coastal floods from the middle of the 21st century onwards, emphasizing the need to prioritize such actions among the range of countermeasures being proposed for Jakarta.

Highlights

  • Jakarta is one of the largest coastal megacities in the world, with a total population of over 10 million inhabitants

  • This study demonstrates that actions to stop land subsidence would be the most effective countermeasure to mitigate coastal floods from the middle of the 21st century onwards, emphasizing the need to prioritize such actions among the range of countermeasures being proposed for Jakarta

  • It should be noted that this study only discusses coastal floods induced by an overflow of the dykes, neglecting other mechanisms such as seawater that penetrates through sewage pipes and inundates the ground, geotechnical failure of the dykes due to differential settlement, or river flooding

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Summary

Introduction

Jakarta is one of the largest coastal megacities in the world, with a total population of over 10 million inhabitants It has been facing many urban development issues [1], land subsidence appears to currently pose one of the biggest challenges to its long-term ability to sustain human settlement. It should be noted that this study only discusses coastal floods induced by an overflow of the dykes, neglecting other mechanisms such as seawater that penetrates through sewage pipes and inundates the ground, geotechnical failure of the dykes due to differential settlement, or river flooding These are very important problems, and are likely to become worse as the extent of ground subsidence increases. Such matters are outside the scope of the present paper, and should be the target of future work

Numerical Simulation
Findings
Current Situation of Coastal Floods Revealed through the Interview
Full Text
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