DORDRECHT, Netherlands — The Dutch enjoy a hard-earned reputation for building river dikes and sea barriers. Over centuries, they have transformed a flood-prone river delta into a wealthy nation roughly twice the size of New Jersey. If scientific projections for global warming are right, however, that success will be sorely tested. Globally, sea levels may rise up to a foot during the early part of this century, and up to nearly three feet by century’s end. This would bring higher tidal surges from the more-intense coastal storms that scientists also project, along with the risk of more frequent and more severe river floods from intense rainfall inland. Nowhere does this aquatic vise squeeze more tightly than on the world’s densely populated river deltas. So why is one of the most famous deltas – the Netherlands – breaching some river dikes and digging up some of the rare land in this part of the country that rises (barely) above sea level? In the Biesbosch, a small inland delta near the city of Dordrecht, ecologist Alphons van Winden looks out his car window at a lone excavator filling a dump truck with soil. He considers the question and […]
Saturday, November 17th, 2007
How to Fight a Rising Sea
Author: PETER N. SPOTTS
Source: The Christian Science Monitor
Publication Date: 15-Nov-07
Link: How to Fight a Rising Sea
Source: The Christian Science Monitor
Publication Date: 15-Nov-07
Link: How to Fight a Rising Sea
Stephan: