Presentation Outline. Project Overview. Sea Level Rise Assessment & Decision Tools. Community Engagement. Tina Whitman, Friends of the San Juans

Similar documents
Sea Level Rise Adaptation Tools for the San Juan Archipelago and the Salish Sea

Sea-level Rise on Cape Cod: How Vulnerable Are We? Rob Thieler U.S. Geological Survey Woods Hole, MA

Mapping of Future Coastal Hazards. for Southern California. January 7th, David Revell, Ph.D. E.

Sea Level Rise Vulnerability in San Juan County

Armoring on Puget Sound: Progress towards a better baseline

COASTAL GEOLOGIC SERVICES, INC.

Coastal Impacts of Climate Change in the Northwest: A Summary of the Findings of the upcoming National Climate Assessment

Coastal Barrier Island Network (CBIN): Management strategies for the future

Coastal Processes 101. Greg Berman (Woods Hole Sea Grant & Cape Cod Cooperative Extension)

Developing a nearshore geospatial framework for recovery assessment and planning

Adaptation to Sea Level Rise A Regional Approach

MARINE SPATIAL PLANNING

Connecticut Coastal Management Program

Randall W. Parkinson, Ph.D., P.G. Institute of Water and Environment Florida International University

SOUTHEAST COASTAL ASSESSMENT: Creating a shared vision

Sea Level Rise and the Public Trust Doctrine:

The Coastal Change Analysis Program and the Land Cover Atlas. Rebecca Love NOAA Office for Coastal Management

Regional-scale understanding of the geologic character and sand resources of the Atlantic inner continental shelf, Maine to Virginia

THE USE OF GEOSPATIAL DATA TO SUPPORT VULNERABILITY MAPPING OF THE OREGON COAST. Kelvin Raiford MS Candidate Geography Department of Geosciences

Preliminary Vulnerability Assessment of Coastal Flooding Threats - Taylor County, Florida

Town of Old Orchard Beach: A summary of sea level rise science, storm surge, and some highlighted results from SLAWG work efforts

Mapping on the Edge: shoreline mapping for regulation and voluntary stewardship

Storm Surge/Coastal Inundation State of the Union. Jamie Rhome Storm Surge Team Lead NOAA/National Hurricane Center

Flood Risk Mapping and Forecasting in England

GALVESTON BAY RSM Moving toward an Integrated, Cooperative, and Holistic Approach to Estuarine Sediments

ALTERNATIVES TO BULKHEADS IN THE PUGET SOUND REGION: WHAT IS SOFT SHORE PROTECTION? WHAT IS NOT? Jim Johannessen MS, Coastal Geologic Services, Inc.

MISSISSIPPI COASTAL IMPROVEMENTS

Nearshore Habitats Why What You do Matters. Landscapes on the Edge November 2016

Regional Sediment Management

Protecting the Storm Damage Prevention and Flood Control Interests of Coastal Resource Areas

Opportunities to Improve Ecological Functions of Floodplains and Reduce Flood Risk along Major Rivers in the Puget Sound Basin

Heather Schlosser Army Corps of Engineers Coastal Studies Group August 28, 2008

Introducing the. a partnership of

Developing Long-Term Coastal Erosion Hazard Maps ASFPM Conference Seattle, WA

Ed Curtis, PE, CFM, FEMA Region IX and Darryl Hatheway, CFM, AECOM ASFPM 2016, Grand Rapids, MI

Draft for Discussion 11/11/2016

Marine Spatial Planning: A Tool for Implementing Ecosystem-Based Management

Coastal Processes and Shoreline Erosion on the Oregon Coast, Cascade Head to Cape Kiwanda

Remote sensing and GIS for multi-hazard risk assessments in the coastal zone: recent applications and challenges in the Pacific Jens Kruger

Scenarios for the NI coast in the 21 st Century

Coastal Processes 101 & The Regs. Greg Berman (Woods Hole Sea Grant & Cape Cod Cooperative Extension)

GIS Data and Technology to Support Transportation & MPO Decision-Making & Planning. using an Eco-Logical* Approach within the Kansas City Region

Bob Van Dolah. Marine Resources Research Institute South Carolina Department of Natural Resources

ICAN Great Lakes 2010 Workshop

Phillip Island Nature Parks Coastal Process Study 8 October 2014

Modeling Coastal Change Using GIS Technology

Some Thoughts on the Role of Elevation

Sea Level Rise in Miami-Dade County Florida Implications for Management of Coastal Wetlands and the Everglades

Introduction. Methods. Keyword: Bulkhead, Armoring, Thurston County, SRFB, Forage Fish

Landslide & Coastal Erosion Risk Reduction at Oregon s Water/Wastewater Networks

Sea Level Rise and the Scarborough Marsh Scarborough Land Trust Annual Meeting April 24, 2018

Adapting to Rising Sea Level & Extreme Weather Events:

NOAA s OCM: Services, tools and collaboration opportunities & Puerto Rico s NE Marine Corridor as a case study

Virginia Shoreline Mapping Tools

Del Mar Sediment Management Study

We are interconnected, we are resilient As air temperatures warm forests change, fires increase glaciers retreat, snowpack diminishes sediment

Charting a Course for Coastal Climate Change Adaptation in Canada

A process-based approach toward assessing the coastal impact of projected sea level rise and severe storms

Lecture 18 Constructing a Coastal Data Model for Nearshore Puget Sound: A GIS Data, Information, and Knowledge Community Perspective with connections

TRB First International Conference on Surface Transportation Resilience

Final Results and Outreach Lessons Learned

Primer on Coastal Erosion And Habitat Creation

Application #: TEXT

Planning for the Future of Humboldt Bay: Sea Level Rise, Sediment Management, Sand Spits and Salt Marshes. Joel Gerwein

The Science of Coastal and Marine Spatial Planning A Workshop for Oregon Academic Faculty

Dynamic Coast. Coastal erosion / Management Briefing to THC

DELINEATION OF COASTAL SET-BACK LINES AND OVERLAY ZONES IN WEST COAST DISTRICT

Sediment Management in the Coastal Bays

Relatively little hard substrate occurs naturally in the

Lorna V Inniss, Ph.D SAGE Workshop, New York City

Modeling Sea-Level Rise in Coastal Wetlands: Understanding Potential Impacts and Their Implications for Management on Cape Cod

Sea-level Rise and Storm Effects on Coastal Systems under Changing Global Climate. Cape May, NJ 12 January 2009

Soft Shore Protection As An Alternative To Bulkheads - Projects And Monitoring

Assessing Sea Level Rise, Storm Surge and Flooding Risks at the Ogunquit Wastewater Treatment Facility COMMITMENT & INTEGRITY DRIVE RESULTS

DEPARTMENT OF GEOLOGY AND MINERAL INDUSTRIES WAYS & MEANS SUBCOMMITTEE ON NATURAL RESOURCES MARCH 2, 2017

USGS National Geospatial Program Understanding User Needs. Dick Vraga National Map Liaison for Federal Agencies July 2015

An introduction to thee Urban Oases Site Selection Tool:

Baseline Estuarine-Upland Transition Zone

Vulnerability Assessment of Coastal Flooding Threats St. Joseph Bay to Apalachee Bay Coastline - Draft

Rising Sea Levels: Time for Proactive Action in Florida and the Caribbean?

Community Mapping Network. Selected Coastal Atlases and Information Systems in British Columbia, Canada

Australian Coastal Councils Conference

USGS efforts to model sea-level rise impact to tidal marshes along the California coast.

City of Goleta Coastal Hazard Mapping and Vulnerability Assessment Public Workshop. Public Workshop Agenda

Sea level rise Web GIS Applications

Promoting Resilience to Changing Weather

Summary Visualizations for Coastal Spatial Temporal Dynamics

HAB Forecaster. For info on HABs in the Pacific Northwest see:

Sea Level Rise Providing Nature A-Right-of Way

Planning for the Shoreline

From Vulnerability to Resilience And the Tools to Get There. Out of Harm s Way Partnership for the Delaware Estuary August 1, 2012

Mapping Maine s Working Waterfront: for Our Heritage and Economy

Sri Lanka has a coastline of km excluding the shoreline of bays and inlets.

Assessing the Permanence of Blue Carbon Sinks

Coastal Erosion & Climate Change: PRIDE 2005 Towards an Alaska Wind/Wave Climatology

New Zealand s Next Top Model: integrating tsunami modelling into land use planning

Coastal Environment. Introduction. 4.1 Coastal Environment. Extent of Coastal Environment

Port of Kalama, 2013 TEMCO Berth Maintenance Dredging and In-water Flow-Lane Placement Project

Wainui Beach Management Strategy (WBMS) Summary of Existing Documents. GNS Tsunami Reports

Summary Description Municipality of Anchorage. Anchorage Coastal Resource Atlas Project

Transcription:

Healthy Beaches for People & Fish Sea Level Rise Adaptation Tools for San Juan County, WA Tina Whitman & Andrea MacLennan December 10, 2015 Presentation Outline Project Overview Tina Whitman, Friends of the San Juans Sea Level Rise Assessment & Decision Tools Andrea MacLennan, Coastal Geologic Services Community Engagement Tina Whitman, Friends of the San Juans

Healthy Beaches for People & Fish Sea Level Rise Adaptation Tools for San Juan County, WA Tina Whitman and Andrea MacLennan Project Overview Partners: Friends of the San Juans Coastal Geologic Services Salish Sea Biological Resource Media Funders: U.S. EPA North Pacific LCC Sustainable Path Foundation Bullitt Foundation Technical Team: Washington Departments of Ecology, Natural Resources and Fish and Wildlife, The University of Washington, Tulalip Tribes, Samish Indian Nation, United States Geological Survey, Padilla Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve San Juan County Public Works, SJC Salmon Recovery, Puget Sound Partnership

Healthy Beaches for People & Fish Sea Level Rise Adaptation Tools for San Juan County, WA Project Overview > 400 Miles Marine Shoreline Diverse Shoreform Types High Ecosystem Services Non-urban Flood & Erosion Hazards Vancouver, BC Good place to develop & test sea level rise adaptation tools Seattle, WA

Healthy Beaches for People & Fish Sea Level Rise Adaptation Tools for San Juan County, WA Project Overview New Research SLR Vulnerability Model SLR Regulatory Review Tidal Elevation of Surf Smelt Spawn Manager Outreach Local and Regional Interviews, Surveys, Focus Groups & Workshops Mgt. Recommendations Community Engagement Decision Tools, King Tide Events, Workshops & Surveys Adaptation Projects Public Infrastructure/Habitat Relocation of Private Homes Improved Policy

Sea Level Rise Decision Tools Sea Level Rise Vulnerability Assessment of San Juan County December 10, 2015 By: Andrea MacLennan, MS Coastal Geologic Services andrea@coastalgeo.com www.coastalgeo.com

Make Informed Decisions How will my shoreline respond to sea level rise? How vulnerable is my property? What are appropriate responses for my type of shoreline? Shoreform Response San Juan County Vulnerability Assessment Appropriate Adaptation Approaches

Make Informed Decisions Shoreform San Juan County Response Vulnerability Assessment Appropriate Adaptation Approaches Different shoreforms will respond differently What type of hazards? (erosion or floods? both?) When? 2050/2100? What are longterm vs short term solutions? Costs?

Shoreform Response Different shoreforms will respond differently Shoretype Topography Geology Sediment supply Littoral drift cells No Appreciable Drift Space to move landward Septic?

Shoreform Response Different shoreforms will respond differently Increase in water levels, high tides Increase bluff/bank erosion Natural shorelines will move landward More frequent high water events storms and el ninos Habitat loss via coastal squeeze armored shores

Shoreform Response Rocky Shores Vertical shift upwards/landward shift in tidal elevation Similar shift in intertidal habitats

Shoreform Response - Bluffs Landward shift of entire beach profile Bluff erosion enables local and down-drift beaches to adjust

Shoreform Response Barrier Beaches Crest of berm will build higher and shift landward via overwash Landward shift in habitats, dune grass, driftwood, intertidal spawners Habitat/beach loss can occur where landward constrains limits natural migration of beach features

Shoreform Response - Artificial Static shoreline armor prevents landward migration of shoreline and habitats resulting in habitat and beach loss

Make Informed Decisions Shoreform San Juan County Response Vulnerability Assessment Appropriate Adaptation Approaches Different shoreforms will respond differently What type of hazards? (erosion or floods?) When? 2050/2100? What are longterm vs short term solutions? Costs?

San Juan County Vulnerability Assessment Objectives Develop a GIS tool to visualize SLR implications that integrates bluff erosion and inundation Identify structures and roads vulnerable to erosion and inundation Identify priority areas and potential management strategies

San Juan County Vulnerability Assessment SLR Projections National Research Council 2012 Sea Level Rise for the Coasts of California, Oregon and Washington: Past, Present, and Future. 2012. ISBN 978-10-309-25594-3 The project Technical Advisory Group recommended using 2 scenarios and 2 planning horizons NRC SLR Projections (NAS 2012) 2050 (ft) 2100 (ft) Moderate (IPCC A1B) Scenario 0.5 2 High (IPCC A1FI) Scenario 1.6 4.7

San Juan County Vulnerability Assessment Create the Inundation (Bath Tub) Model Step 1. Created a countywide MHHW shoreline MHHW = Mean Higher-High Water Step 2. Linked that with topography Step 3. Created contours for Highest Observed Water Level (HOWL) and each scenario and time horizons (2050 Mod, 2050 High, 2100 Mod, 2100 High) Step 4. Create polygons from lines

San Juan County Vulnerability Assessment Erosion Rates Background erosion rates from a stratified sample of shoretypes (1-2%). - Feeder bluffs, - Transport zones - Pocket Beaches - Accretion shoreforms Exposure, Orientation DSAS, 1960s - 2009

San Juan County Vulnerability Assessment Buffering Bluff Erosion Bluff crest was digitized from LIDAR slope data Estimated future erosion was buffered from bluff crest Shoreform (8.5-155 ft) Scenario (Mod, High) Planning horizon (2050, 2100) Structures and roads were selected that intersect Profile view of future erosion estimates NOT to SCALE

San Juan County Vulnerability Assessment Uncertainty, Assumptions and Limitations NOT a predictive tool, developed to enhance understanding and facilitate planning Detailed error analysis in report Error analysis included measures of cumulative error Cumulative error was mapped as polygons to bracket results Not all drivers of change accounted for in the model Uncertainty in rate of accelerated bluff retreat and sea level rise

San Juan County Vulnerability Assessment Assess vulnerability to floods and erosion

SJC Vulnerability Assessment Threatened Roads: Flood Assess road access vulnerability to flooding

SJC Vulnerability Assessment Threatened Roads: Eros Assess road access vulnerability to erosion

Make Informed Decisions Shoreform San Juan County Response Vulnerability Assessment Appropriate Adaptation Approaches Different shoreforms will respond differently What type of hazards? (erosion or floods? When? 2050/2100? What are longterm vs short term solutions? Costs?

Appropriate Adaptation Approaches Appropriate Adaptation Approach Planning horizon Cost of infrastructure Maintenance Opportunities Habitat conservation / restoration Increased resilience

Appropriate Adaptation Approaches - Relocate Effective for managing erosion and inundation in the long-term Requires adequate upland area for relocation Often cheaper than engineered solutions Most effective for septic, outbuildings, and highly vulnerable primary structures

Appropriate Adaptation Approaches - Elevate Only effective for managing coastal flooding, not erosion Driftwood can damage pilings, elevated structures

Appropriate Adaptation Approaches - Fortify Shore armor has limitations: Only effective for managing erosion, not flooding Will not curb all bluff erosion

Appropriate Adaptation Approaches - Nourish Nourish entire beach profile Build a storm berm, to absorb wave energy Compensate (short-term) for lost sediment supply or habitat loss

Appropriate Adaptation Approaches Bluffs Barrier beaches Pocket beaches Relocate structures Nourish entire beach profile Nourish storm berm Nourish waterward of armor Elevate Fortify The most appropriate approach depends on site-specific conditions

Want to learn more? andrea@coastalgeo DOT com

Partners: FRIENDS of the San Juans Coastal Geologic Services Resource Media Funders: U.S. EPA North Pacific LCC Sustainable Path Foundation FRIENDS Membership Sea Level Rise Adaptation Tools San Juan County, WA Engaging Managers & Community Members Tina Whitman, MS FRIENDS of the San Juans tina@sanjuans dot org

SJC Sea Level Rise Adaptation Tools Multiple Scales of Sea Level Rise Outreach Efforts 1. Regional Managers Regulators, Managers, Scientists 2. County Managers County Public Works and Planning Departments, Conservation Entities 3. Community Focus Area Workshop and Survey of Residents and Property Owners 4. Lessons Learned and Next Steps

Manager Outreach SJC Sea Level Rise Adaptation Tools Stakeholder Interviews 39 federal, state, tribal and county scientists, regulators, managers Focus Groups 17 federal, county, state, tribal and ngo managers Surveys 20 federal, state, county and city planners Technical Team County, state agency, federal, tribal scientists and managers County Workshops Public Works, Planning, Conservation Groups

SJC Sea Level Rise Adaptation Tools In the future, normal tides may look more like today s extreme tides Local Outreach- vulnerable communities King Tide Events 2015 Low Tide 2012 King Tide Ginny Sherrow Photo

SJC Sea Level Rise Adaptation Tools Local Outreach- vulnerable communities Shaw Island Community Workshop 39 residents 2/3 shoreline property owners Workshop Partners & Roles Regional SLR WA Sea Grant Local shorelines 101- FSJ SLR vulnerability assessment- CGS Local adaptation projects- FSJ Live-results, anonymous participant polling- WA Sea Grant

SJC Sea Level Rise Adaptation Tools Local Outreach- vulnerable communities Shaw Island Community Survey Results

SJC Sea Level Rise Adaptation Tools Local Outreach- vulnerable communities Shaw Island Community Survey Results

SJC Sea Level Rise Adaptation Tools SJC Sea Level Rise Adaptation Tools Local Outreach- vulnerable communities Shaw Island Community Survey Results

SJC Sea Level Rise Adaptation Tools SJC Sea Level Rise Adaptation Tools Local Outreach- vulnerable communities Shaw Island Community Survey Results

SJC Sea Level Rise Adaptation Tools Local Outreach- vulnerable communities Shaw Island Community Survey Results

SJC Sea Level Rise Rise Adaptation Tools Tools Local Outreach- vulnerable communities Shaw Island Community Survey Results Example image testing- Shaw community event survey

SJC Sea Level Rise Rise Adaptation Tools Tools Local Outreach- vulnerable communities Shaw Island Community Survey Results Example image testing- Shaw community event survey

SJC Sea Level Rise Adaptation Tools Lessons Learned Management Structure Improved or different frameworks are needed to support the implementation of adaptation and multi-benefit projects; Real Life Examples Successful on-the-ground adaptation case studies from our region will be key; Expanded Community Engagement Public feedback to managers is essential.

SJC Sea Level Rise Adaptation Tools Next Steps Additional community workshops and surveys. Cost/benefit analysis for adaptation case studies. Implement multi-benefit adaptation projects. Annual King Tides events with Conservation collaborators.

Sea Level Rise Adaptation Tools San Juan County, WA Project Reports at: www.sanjuans.org/nearshorestudies.htm tina@sanjuans dot org Andrea@coastalgeo dot com