Differing views have emerged on the possibility of saving
low-lying areas in southern Dunedin from sea-level rise.
Consulting engineer Dave Tucker yesterday said engineering
solutions were available to deal with the issue, while
Sustainable Dunedin co-chairman Phillip Cole, also an
engineer, said a retreat from the area was inevitable.
A report released on Monday identified South Dunedin, St
Kilda and St Clair as "hot spots" vulnerable to what could be
a 1.6m rise in sea levels by 2090.
The report on the effects of climate change in Dunedin was
commissioned by the Dunedin City Council, written by
University of Otago Emeritus Professor of Geography Blair
Fitzharris and released on Monday.
It said the city would eventually have to protect, retreat or
evacuate areas including South Dunedin, St Kilda and St
Clair.
Other problem areas were the harbourside, the lower Taieri
Plain, including the Dunedin airport, populated estuaries
along the coast, and the ecosystems of upland conservation
regions.
In his report, Prof Fitzharris said the city needed to focus
on "adaptation" to deal with the problem, and that was not a
one-off event but a process that involved awareness-raising,
the development of knowledge and data, and risk assessment.
Some adaptation was occurring on a limited basis, he said.
"However, there remain significant challenges to achieving
concrete actions that reduce risks."
Implementing measures such as planned retreat and dune
management, building design, prohibition of new structures
and siting requirements that accounted for sea-level rise was
difficult.
Mr Tucker has previously told the council it needed to form
long-term mitigation strategies to deal with the effects of
climate change.
Yesterday, he said two areas of Dunedin were not protected by
hills: the St Clair and St Kilda beaches area, and the lower
harbour near Port Chalmers.
The areas of risk if the sea came through were not just South
Dunedin, but all the reclaimed land in the city, including
land up to the Dunedin railway station, and up to parts of
the University of Otago.
He suggested a "barrage" across the harbour that would take
advantage of a natural bottleneck between Port Chalmers and
Portobello.
The barrage would link Goat and Quarantine Islands, trapping
water in the upper harbour during high tide and releasing it
at low tide. That would deal with sea-level rise at the
harbour end of the city, and could include turbines to
produce electricity.
The beach end of the city "could be saved in some engineering
manner".
"You only need to go to Holland," he said, where technology
had been developed to keep the North Sea out of the country.
"I'm quite sure if you got consultants from Holland they
would come up with ideas to stop sea ingress."
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