Angnuureng Bapentire Donatus, Adade Richard, Chuku Ernest Obeng, Dzantor Selorm, Brempong Emmanuel Kwadzo, Mattah Precious Agbeko Dzorgbe
Africa Centre of Excellence in Coastal Resilience, Centre for Coastal Management, SBS, University of Cape Coast, Cape Coast, Ghana.
Department of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences, School of Biological Sciences, University of Cape Coast, Cape Coast, Ghana.
Heliyon. 2023 Oct 4;9(10):e20633. doi: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e20633. eCollection 2023 Oct.
The fiscal and social cost of ameliorating the impact of coastal erosion resulting from climate change is an increasing burden for coastal states, and in developing nations the physical interventions implemented may present a double agony - increasing debt levels and potentially obstructing livelihoods in the rural coasts. Against this background, this study was conducted to explore the impact of hard-engineered coastal protection on coastal vulnerability and community livelihoods in Ghana using a combination of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAV), geographic information system tools and social survey. Shoreline change analysis by the application of the Digital Shoreline Analysis System (DSAS) with aerial photographs from 2005 to 2022 reveals an average statistical rate of change of -1 m/year in shoreline erosion of the beaches. A computation of coastal vulnerability indices for fourteen beaches, incorporating coastal protection as an additional parameter shows that from east to west, hard-engineered coastal protection structures slowed the rate of erosion, whereas unprotected beaches have highly eroded, stressing the importance of coastal protection. In consequence, coastal protection has dire livelihood-reduction implications for coastal inhabitants who are predominantly artisanal fishers. A lack of acceptable consultation with the communities exacerbates the effects from these hard-engineering interventions. The beaches of high vulnerability concerns are Dzita, Ada, Sakumono, Glefe, Apam, Anlo, and Busua. To safeguard the livelihoods of vulnerable coastal communities, we support a shift from hard engineering to more integrated and nature-based coastal management approaches on a national scale since most parts of the coast are now susceptible to erosion in contrast to what was previously observed that only the eastern part of the coast was highly vulnerable.
减轻气候变化导致的海岸侵蚀影响所产生的财政和社会成本,对沿海国家来说是日益沉重的负担,而在发展中国家,实施的物理干预措施可能带来双重痛苦——债务水平上升,并可能阻碍农村沿海地区的生计。在此背景下,本研究采用无人机(UAV)、地理信息系统工具和社会调查相结合的方法,探讨了加纳海岸硬工程防护对海岸脆弱性和社区生计的影响。通过应用数字海岸线分析系统(DSAS)和2005年至2022年的航空照片进行海岸线变化分析,结果显示海滩海岸线侵蚀的平均统计变化率为每年-1米。对14个海滩的海岸脆弱性指数进行计算,并将海岸防护作为一个额外参数纳入其中,结果表明,从东到西,海岸硬工程防护结构减缓了侵蚀速度,而未受保护的海滩则遭受了严重侵蚀,凸显了海岸防护的重要性。因此,海岸防护对主要为个体渔民的沿海居民的生计有着严重的减少影响。与社区缺乏可接受的协商加剧了这些硬工程干预措施的影响。高脆弱性的海滩包括Dzita、Ada、Sakumono、Glefe、Apam、Anlo和Busua。为了保障脆弱沿海社区的生计,我们支持在全国范围内从硬工程转向更综合、基于自然的海岸管理方法,因为与之前观察到的情况不同,现在海岸的大部分地区都容易受到侵蚀,之前只有海岸的东部地区高度脆弱。