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Rethinking Coastal Community Approaches to Climate Change Impacts and Adaptation.

Authors :
Sorensen, Carlo
Knudsen, Per
Sorensen, Per
Damgaard, Thomas
Molgaard, Mads R.
Jensen, Jürgen
Source :
Journal of Coastal Research; 2018 Special Issue, Vol. 85, p1521-1525, 5p, 3 Diagrams, 2 Graphs, 1 Map
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Sorensen, C.; Knudsen, P.; Sorensen, P.; Damgaard, T.; Molgaard, M.R., and Jensen, J., 2018. Rethinking Coastal Community Approaches to Climate Change Impacts and Adaptation. In: Shim, J.-S.; Chun, I., and Lim, H.S. (eds.), Proceedings from the International Coastal Symposium (ICS) 2018 (Busan, Republic of Korea). Journal of Coastal Research, Special Issue No. 85, pp.1521–1525. Coconut Creek (Florida), ISSN 0749-0208. Low-lying coastal communities face almost insurmountable challenges from floods and climate change. Research work on adaptation and mitigation particularly emphasizes on cities and mega-cities as a natural consequence of their agglomeration of people and assets. Less focus is put on smaller coastal communities and their challenges, one of which is a lack of local expertise and knowledge. Adaptation to climate change is often a local governance level task, however. Co-work between municipal and national authorities, the utility company, research, business, consultants and citizens has resulted in a common framework to address and deal with water-related challenges in a Danish coastal community. From an assessment of combined impacts of climate change (i.e. sea level rise and storm surges, precipitation and cloudbursts and associated groundwater level responses) and stresses from degrading sewer systems and land subsidence, impact zones are mapped. The multi-player, end-user defined work transcends sectors and builds capacity by sharing data and knowledge. It mainstreams climate change issues into business, management, planning and early warning: the overall goal is an adaptation strategy unfolded from stakeholder involvement and responsibility, cost-effective decision making, climate-related asset management processes and a holistic livable cities approach to this highly vulnerable coastal community. The collaboration and common framework enable the actors to articulate need of information and establish feedback mechanisms between local level work and e.g. sea level research and climate services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
07490208
Volume :
85
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of Coastal Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
145237090
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2112/SI85-305.1