Extreme sea-level change and strategic infrastructure adaptation pathways

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Title
Extreme sea-level change and strategic infrastructure adaptation pathways

CoPED ID
f7a88698-a198-4359-ba2a-e72cde3435c0

Status
Active

Funders

Value
No funds listed.

Start Date
Sept. 30, 2021

End Date
June 29, 2025

Description

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In the light of the measured industrial-age and predicted long-term rise in global sea levels, the UK rapidly needs ways to prioritise its future strategic coastal infrastructure adaption and planning to ensure their long-term resilience. For example, where is critical renewable infrastructure at the coast that will deliver our low carbon targets, and how resilient is it to future extreme sea-levels?

This project aims to advance novel cross-disciplinary approaches (climate science; geo-spatial analysis; engineering decision making) to examine the hazards and socio-economic impacts of recently published climate change and sea-level-rise projections (UKCP18; IPCC AR6) on long term planning of critical coastal infrastructure in the UK. It aligns with EPSRC research areas: Coastal and waterway engineering; Infrastructure and urban systems; Operational Research.

Objectives:

With expert engagement, determine a set of extreme sea-level scenarios for the UK for low resolution, high impact analysis.
Collect the digital datasets and integrate into a functional framework to include infrastructure networks; elevation models; future sea level scenarios; risk assessment frameworks and climate services, at a variety of spatial and temporal scales.
Downscale the spatial analysis coastal & estuarine critical infrastructure's future vulnerability and exposure to rising sea levels in case study regions (CSRs)
Estimate the direct and indirect impacts of extreme scenarios in CSRs, and establish thresholds and options for adaptation within CSRs.
Develop adaptive pathways for long-term strategic planning and investigate the scalability of the approach to national levels.

Potential applications and benefits:

Improved understanding of vulnerability, exposure and risk of UK coastal strategic infrastructure.
Improved of prioritisation of adaption responses to sea level rise.
Improved long term planning of/for coastal infrastructure.
Improved data dissemination of complex model outputs, uncertainties and adaptive planning approaches.
Improved co-operation and coordination between owners/operators, stakeholders, communities, regulatory bodies and government.

David Dawson SUPER_PER
Clifford Richardson STUDENT_PER

Subjects by relevance
  1. Climate changes
  2. Infrastructures
  3. Coasts
  4. Scenarios
  5. Baltic Sea
  6. Risk management
  7. Strategic planning
  8. Sea level
  9. Risks
  10. Future
  11. Seas
  12. Environmental changes
  13. Forecasts

Extracted key phrases
  1. Future sea level scenario
  2. Sea level rise
  3. Future strategic coastal infrastructure adaption
  4. Global sea level
  5. UK coastal strategic infrastructure
  6. Strategic infrastructure adaptation pathway
  7. Extreme sea
  8. Future extreme sea
  9. Critical coastal infrastructure
  10. Level change
  11. Term strategic planning
  12. Long term planning
  13. Critical renewable infrastructure
  14. Estuarine critical infrastructure
  15. National level

Related Pages

UKRI project entry

UK Project Locations