Coastal flooding in the Maldives: an assessment of historic events and their implications

Abstract With many inhabited islands only at about 1 m above mean sea level, the Maldives is among the nations most threatened by coastal flooding and sea level rise. However, the understanding of recent coastal flood events in the Maldives is limited and is important to understanding future flood t...

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Main Authors: Matthew Wadey, Sally Brown, Robert J. Nicholls, Ivan Haigh
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/10.1007/s11069-017-2957-5
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spelling ftrepec:oai:RePEc:spr:nathaz:v:89:y:2017:i:1:d:10.1007_s11069-017-2957-5 2023-05-15T18:25:43+02:00 Coastal flooding in the Maldives: an assessment of historic events and their implications Matthew Wadey Sally Brown Robert J. Nicholls Ivan Haigh http://link.springer.com/10.1007/s11069-017-2957-5 unknown http://link.springer.com/10.1007/s11069-017-2957-5 article ftrepec 2020-12-04T13:30:50Z Abstract With many inhabited islands only at about 1 m above mean sea level, the Maldives is among the nations most threatened by coastal flooding and sea level rise. However, the understanding of recent coastal flood events in the Maldives is limited and is important to understanding future flood threats. This paper assesses (1) the sea level and wave climate of the Maldives, (2) the sea level and wave conditions during recent coastal flood events, and (3) the implications for flood management and future research. The analysis uses observed still water levels (1987–2015) and hindcast wave conditions (1979–2015). Two significant flood events on 10–13 April 1987 and 15–17 May 2007 are examined in detail. This shows that coastal flooding in the Maldives occurs due to multiple interacting sources. These include long-period (up to 20 s) energetic waves generated in the Southern Ocean combined with spring tides. Wave run-up (mainly wave set-up) appears an essential mechanism for a flood, but is currently poorly quantified. However, as sea levels continue to rise the conditions that produce a flood will occur more frequently, suggesting that flooding will become common in the Maldives. This analysis is a starting point for future research and highlights the need to continue research on flood sources, pathways and receptors, and plan adaptation measures. Priorities include monitoring of waves, sea levels and flood events, and a better understanding of set-up (and other shallow water processes over reefs). The Maldives, Sea level rise, Coastal flooding, Swell waves, Run-up, Set-up, Climate change adaptation Article in Journal/Newspaper Southern Ocean RePEc (Research Papers in Economics) Southern Ocean
institution Open Polar
collection RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
op_collection_id ftrepec
language unknown
description Abstract With many inhabited islands only at about 1 m above mean sea level, the Maldives is among the nations most threatened by coastal flooding and sea level rise. However, the understanding of recent coastal flood events in the Maldives is limited and is important to understanding future flood threats. This paper assesses (1) the sea level and wave climate of the Maldives, (2) the sea level and wave conditions during recent coastal flood events, and (3) the implications for flood management and future research. The analysis uses observed still water levels (1987–2015) and hindcast wave conditions (1979–2015). Two significant flood events on 10–13 April 1987 and 15–17 May 2007 are examined in detail. This shows that coastal flooding in the Maldives occurs due to multiple interacting sources. These include long-period (up to 20 s) energetic waves generated in the Southern Ocean combined with spring tides. Wave run-up (mainly wave set-up) appears an essential mechanism for a flood, but is currently poorly quantified. However, as sea levels continue to rise the conditions that produce a flood will occur more frequently, suggesting that flooding will become common in the Maldives. This analysis is a starting point for future research and highlights the need to continue research on flood sources, pathways and receptors, and plan adaptation measures. Priorities include monitoring of waves, sea levels and flood events, and a better understanding of set-up (and other shallow water processes over reefs). The Maldives, Sea level rise, Coastal flooding, Swell waves, Run-up, Set-up, Climate change adaptation
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Matthew Wadey
Sally Brown
Robert J. Nicholls
Ivan Haigh
spellingShingle Matthew Wadey
Sally Brown
Robert J. Nicholls
Ivan Haigh
Coastal flooding in the Maldives: an assessment of historic events and their implications
author_facet Matthew Wadey
Sally Brown
Robert J. Nicholls
Ivan Haigh
author_sort Matthew Wadey
title Coastal flooding in the Maldives: an assessment of historic events and their implications
title_short Coastal flooding in the Maldives: an assessment of historic events and their implications
title_full Coastal flooding in the Maldives: an assessment of historic events and their implications
title_fullStr Coastal flooding in the Maldives: an assessment of historic events and their implications
title_full_unstemmed Coastal flooding in the Maldives: an assessment of historic events and their implications
title_sort coastal flooding in the maldives: an assessment of historic events and their implications
url http://link.springer.com/10.1007/s11069-017-2957-5
geographic Southern Ocean
geographic_facet Southern Ocean
genre Southern Ocean
genre_facet Southern Ocean
op_relation http://link.springer.com/10.1007/s11069-017-2957-5
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