Modelling and Mapping Coastal Protection: Adapting an EU-Wide Model to National Specificities
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Area
2.2. Delineation of the Coastal Zone
2.3. Quantifying and Mapping Coastal Protection at the National Level
2.4. Expert Opinion
2.5. Model Construction
2.6. EU-wide to National-Level Comparison of Coastal Protection Indicators
2.7. National- to Local-Level Comparison of Coastal Protection
3. Results
3.1. Expert Opinion and Variable Weights
3.2. Coastal Protection Capacity
3.3. Coastal Protection Exposure
3.4. Coastal Protection Demand
3.5. Quantitative Comparison of the Outcome of the National- and Regional-Level Model
3.6. Qualitative Comparison of the Outcome of the Local- and National-Level Model
4. Discussion
4.1. Modelling Coastal Protection in the Greek Coastal Zone
4.2. Adapting EU-wide Models to National Specificities
- Delineation of the coastal zone: This was one of the core challenges of the adaptation process, as for the coastal zone, the definition used at the EU level was not applicable for the national model. For countries such as Greece, with a large complexity in the structure of its coastline, a large variation of the geophysical and biotic components of its coastal zone, and a large number of smaller land masses (i.e., islands), it is pretty challenging to adopt a generic approach. In our case, we developed a rule-based system, in which the coastal zone was delineated differently depending on the landmass extent. Although this requires some additional computational effort, our study shows that such specific approaches are able to indicate sensitivities and vulnerabilities in spaces, which would not be visible with a unified approach.
- Selected variables for the description of indicators: We identified some discrepancies between the EU and the national model in terms of variables used. In fact, at the national level, there were more variables taken into account, and their inclusion has also led to different results in terms of identifying the areas with higher or lower exposure or demand for coastal protection. On the contrary, there was quite some agreement in terms of the variables taken into account between the national- and local-level models, which despite having a different framing, indicated similar areas that are more exposed or more at risk in terms of coastal protection capacity. Through this comparison, we identified the well-known challenge of choosing what we have data for versus what really matters at the local and national levels. Our suggestion is that EU-wide models go through as many national-level adaptations as possible in order to help the EU Member States to identify which additional variables they should be using to inform nationwide models.
- Framing and terminology: Our nationwide model used the terminology and framing of the EU-wide approach. However, when comparing with the local case study, and while also taking into account similar pieces of literature in the country aimed at assessing coastal protection, we detected a large conceptual discrepancy. Within the ES framing used in this work, we refer to and use coastal protection indicators. However, traditionally in Greece, the research assesses coastal protection, framed under the concepts of vulnerability to natural or human-induced threats. This discrepancy could be interpreted in terms of research “tradition”, which is embedded in the research community, but also the community of decision makers who are using this information and the trust they might have in terms related to ES indicators. Our interaction with experts revealed once more the major challenge of introducing new concepts and new terminology within the decision-making community in order to convince them to use the “new” indicator concepts presented here.
- Expert knowledge: Within the used model, the role of experts who are knowledgeable to the area and the coastal protection functions of nature was very significant as it really defined the weights, and therefore the importance, that the different variables have within the studied country. However, bias was observed when it came to the comparison of the weights of the variables, and in some cases, differences in weight contributed to changes in the result of indicators; for instance, sediment accretion obtained the highest weights, along with geomorphology types in this study, whereas in the EU model, sediment accretion rate was not considered, which created variations in the coastal protection capacity in the eastern part of Thessaly. On the other hand, in the EU-level model, the number of variables was smaller compared to the national-level one, and the higher number of variables considered might have induced a higher fragmentation in weights (summation of the weights of variables under each indicator is 1), generating more detailed outputs at the national level compared to the EU-wide model.
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Indicators | Variables |
---|---|
cPcap = coastal protection capacity | ‘geo’ = geomorphology, ‘slo’ = slope, ‘eh’ = emerged habitat type, ‘sh’ = seabed habitat type, and ‘sar’ = sediment accretion rate |
Cpexp = coastal protection exposure | ‘slr’ = sea level rise, ‘ssh’ = storm surge height, ‘wsh’ = wave significant height, ‘tide’ = tidal amplitude, ‘wind’ = wind speed, ‘eoc’ = eastward ocean current, ‘noc’ = northward ocean current, ‘spt’ = potential seawater temperature |
Cpdem = coastal protection demand | ‘popn’ = population density, ‘set’ = settlement density, ‘trans’ = transportation network density, ‘ports’ = port area density, ‘mes’ = mineral extraction sites density, ‘cul’ = cultural sites density, ‘eco’ = ecologically important sites density |
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Hasan, M.U.; Drakou, E.G.; Karymbalis, E.; Tragaki, A.; Gallousi, C.; Liquete, C. Modelling and Mapping Coastal Protection: Adapting an EU-Wide Model to National Specificities. Sustainability 2023, 15, 260. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15010260
Hasan MU, Drakou EG, Karymbalis E, Tragaki A, Gallousi C, Liquete C. Modelling and Mapping Coastal Protection: Adapting an EU-Wide Model to National Specificities. Sustainability. 2023; 15(1):260. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15010260
Chicago/Turabian StyleHasan, Mahbub Ul, Evangelia G. Drakou, Efthimios Karymbalis, Alexandra Tragaki, Christina Gallousi, and Camino Liquete. 2023. "Modelling and Mapping Coastal Protection: Adapting an EU-Wide Model to National Specificities" Sustainability 15, no. 1: 260. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15010260
APA StyleHasan, M. U., Drakou, E. G., Karymbalis, E., Tragaki, A., Gallousi, C., & Liquete, C. (2023). Modelling and Mapping Coastal Protection: Adapting an EU-Wide Model to National Specificities. Sustainability, 15(1), 260. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15010260