1994 - watched her home of 25 years be demolished - lost battle against north sea waves
Farm 39 years earlier 150m away form sea
erosion has accelerated when sea defences were built at Mappleton
Norcliffe family - Barmston, north of Hornsea
2004 - home was 1.5m away from edge
no defences against waves
The Humber estuary Coastal shorline management plan - 'do nothing' - potential economic damage to caravan parks +
isolated farms - not enough to justify defences
a rollback policy for caravan parks but not homes
Holderness, East Yorkshire
60km long stretch of low cliffs (20-30m)
cliff line retreating - 2m a year - fastest in Europe
erosion takes place in storms + tidal surges (6m lost in a storm in 1967)
over 4 km lost since Roman times
what's the problem?
cliffs made of soft glacial clay
coast very exposed - waves have long fetch over north sea
sea level rise - more attack
destructive waves
Beaches are narrow due to longshore drift - little protection
conflicting views
The eldery - lived here whole lives - too old to move
Farmers - lost valuble land - no compensation
Caravan park owners - whole business threatened -
cannot afford to buy more land
Politicians - not economically justifiable as the
edges are not densely populated
Chief engineer - an inevitable natural
process - impossible to protectwhole coast
Shoreline Management plans
1. Do nothing
2. Advance existing defence line by more hard engineering
3. Hold existing defence line by maintaining/ improving standard of protection
4. Retreat existing defence line (strategic realighnment)
strategies are expensive to put in place
so a cost-benefit analysis is done -
+ how sustainable
Costs
loss of farmland
loss of caravan parks + holiday chalets
cost of sea defences
loss of houses
loss of roads
Benefits
no loss of homes or businesses
erosion of cliff stops
no loss of land or farms
coastline is stabilised
Coastal Management
Hard engineering
Sea wall
+ protects cliffs and buildings
- Expensive
Groynes
+ prevents sea removing sand
- exposes other areas of coastline
Rip rap
+ rocks absorb wave energy
- expensive
Off-shore reef
+ waves break on reef and lose power
- interfere with boats and fishing
Soft engineering
Beach replenishment
+ sand reduces wave energy and maintains tourism
- expensive
Managed retreat
+ people and activities avoid erosion by moving inland
- expensive and disruptive
Cliff regrading
+ mass movement less likely
- foot of cliff still needs protection from waves
Integrated coastal zone mangement
the system of dividing the UK coastline into zones that can be managed holistically
reduces damage to environment
Case study of traditional coastal engineering structures
Durlston Bay, Dorset
erosion mainly occured at one particular point -
major weakness in rock
safeguard houses + apartments on cliff top
Regrading cliff - extended forward at base - slope longer - therefore less steep
Installing drainage - remove excess water - slope not as heavy or lubricated after rain
Rip rap - large granite boulders (8 tonnes each) at base - resist wave attack
Swanage Bay, Dorset
erosion occured on a considerable length not
just one point
safeguard houses and hoteld (e.g. Grand Hotel) gardens
Sea wall - built in 1920s - provided promenade and a barrier to wave attack
Cliff regrading - series of steps in cliff - lower slope angles
Groynes - timber groynes in 1930s - 18 recently replaced- reduced long shore drift - beach for protection