4.1 Article

Resilience of Touristic Island Beaches Under Sea Level Rise: A Methodological Framework

Journal

COASTAL MANAGEMENT
Volume 46, Issue 2, Pages 78-102

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/08920753.2018.1426376

Keywords

beach management; blue flag classification; beach erosion; climate variability and change; morphodynamic models; analytical hierarchy process

Funding

  1. action Cross-Border Cooperation for the development of Marine Spatial Planning-THAL-CHOR (ThetaALambda-XOmegaP in Greek)
  2. European Regional Development Fund-ERDF
  3. Greek and Cyprus national funds under the Cross-Border Cooperation Programme Greece-Cyprus
  4. ERABEACH Project
  5. EEA
  6. Greek Public Investment Programme

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This contribution addresses the need for a simple model for managers to employ when planning strategies for the management of touristic beaches under sea level rise. A methodological framework was developed and tested in two Aegean archipelago islands (Lesvos and Rhodes, Greece). The scheme can represent the status of touristic island beaches, based on easily obtained variables/indicators and projections of beach erosion/retreat under different scenarios of mean sea level rise (MSLR) and extreme events. Information on beach geomorphological characteristics, environmental setting, water quality, management, and services (such as those used in the Blue Flag classification) was collated/collected and beach erosion/retreat due to CV & C was estimated through suitable ensembles of cross-shore (1-D) morphodynamic models. A Strength-Weaknesses-OpportunitiesThreats (SWOT) framework was employed to assist in the selection of indicators and multicriteria analysis used to optimize indicator weights and rank beaches according to their sustainability under sea level rise. Implementation of the framework at the two islands has shown that: the majority of Lesvos and Rhodes beaches (82% of a total of 217 beaches and 58% of a total of 97 beaches, respectively) can be classified as beaches with no, or minimal, human interference, suggesting that under environmentally sound coastal management further touristic development might be afforded; there could be very significant effects of the sea level rise on the carrying and buffering capacities of the most developed (Blue Flag) beaches, with some expected even under conservative projections to be completely eroded by 2100, unless technical adaptation measures are taken; and using the proposed framework, touristic beaches can be rapidly ranked in terms of their resilience to sea level rise and their development potential, allowing prioritization of effective management responses.

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