Coastal Management
Coastline Management
- Sediment (littoral) cells divide the coastline
- This cell system makes it easier for coastal planning and management
- Each cell has its own system of coastal planning and management
- In England and Wales, there are 11 cells
- Management strategies protect our coastlines from emerging threats:
- Flooding
- Coastal erosion
Shoreline Management Plans
- A Shoreline Management Plan (SMP) operates in each cell
- SMPs consider the effects of different management strategies
- They aim to produce better management strategies in each cell
- There are 4 main types of shoreline management:
- Hold the line – using hard or soft engineering to stop the shoreline retreating from erosion
- Managed retreat – moving the coastline to a point further inland (realignment)
- Advance the line – moving the coastline further into the sea
- No active intervention – a typical “do-nothing”, letting natural processes occur
- The type of management strategy depends on:
- The threat of coastal erosion and rising sea levels
- How much economic or agricultural value the land may have
- Cultural or social value the land may have
- Environmental and ecological value
- Cost of management strategies
Coastal cells of England and Wales
Coastal cells of England and Wales
Integrated Coastal Zone Management (ICZM)
- Within the coastal system, a change in one place may impact another
- The ICZM takes these issues into account with coastal management planning
- The ICZM is useful for understanding the coast as an entire system of marine processes, people, the environment, and onshore and offshore activities
- The ICZM aims to balance and manage all issues and viewpoints by:
- Assessing what is occurring at the coast
- Identifying all those affected and managing plans accordingly
- Ensuring sustainability
- Balancing the natural and the human
- Discussing future changes and what could occur
- Allowances for changing plans
- This means a solution will benefit all stakeholders