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Applying principles of uncertainty within coastal hazard assessments to better support coastal adaptation
journal contribution
posted on 2021-04-01, 04:44 authored by SA Stephens, RG Bell, Judith LawrenceJudith Lawrence© 2017 by the authors. Coastal hazards result from erosion of the shore, or flooding of low-elevation land when storm surges combine with high tides and/or large waves. Future sea-level rise will greatly increase the frequency and depth of coastal flooding and will exacerbate erosion and raise groundwater levels, forcing vulnerable communities to adapt. Communities, local councils and infrastructure operators will need to decide when and how to adapt. The process of decision making using adaptive pathways approaches, is now being applied internationally to plan for adaptation over time by anticipating tipping points in the future when planning objectives are no longer being met. This process requires risk and uncertainty considerations to be transparent in the scenarios used in adaptive planning. We outline a framework for uncertainty identification and management within coastal hazard assessments. The framework provides a logical flow from the land use situation, to the related level of uncertainty as determined by the situation, to which hazard scenarios to model, to the complexity level of hazard modeling required, and to the possible decision type. Traditionally, coastal flood hazard maps show inundated areas only. We present enhanced maps of flooding depth and frequency which clearly show the degree of hazard exposure, where that exposure occurs, and how the exposure changes with sea-level rise, to better inform adaptive planning processes. The new uncertainty framework and mapping techniques can better inform identification of trigger points for adaptation pathways planning and their expected time range, compared to traditional coastal flooding hazard assessments.
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Preferred citation
Stephens, S. A., Bell, R. G. & Lawrence, J. (2017). Applying principles of uncertainty within coastal hazard assessments to better support coastal adaptation. Journal of Marine Science and Engineering, 5(3), 40-40. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse5030040Publisher DOI
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Journal of Marine Science and EngineeringVolume
5Issue
3Publication date
2017-09-01Pagination
40-40Publisher
MDPI AGPublication status
PublishedOnline publication date
2017-08-29ISSN
2077-1312eISSN
2077-1312Article number
ARTN 40Language
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