Nawarat Khin, Reyns Johan, Vousdoukas Michalis I, Duong Trang Minh, Kras Etiënne, Ranasinghe Roshanka
Department of Coastal and Urban Risk & Resilience, IHE Delft Institute for Water Education, Delft, The Netherlands.
Department of Water Engineering and Management, University of Twente, Enschede, The Netherlands.
Nat Commun. 2024 Dec 5;15(1):10626. doi: 10.1038/s41467-024-54952-1.
Sea level rise is expected to cause chronic shoreline retreat, affecting over 10% of the world's population in low-elevation coastal zones (LECZ). Sandy beaches supported by man-made structures are more vulnerable to substantial beach area loss due to restricted landward migration, affecting ecosystem services. However, the global extent of 'hardened' sandy coastlines at risk of 'severe beach loss' has not been comprehensively quantified. Here, using products and geospatial datasets derived from satellite imagery, we find that, 33% of the world's sandy coastline is currently hardened. Analysis of the results by IPCC AR6 regions show that the most hardened coastal regions are the Bay of Bengal, Western & Central Europe, the Mediterranean, Western North America, and East Asia. Linking coastal hardening information with existing shoreline retreat projections, we find that under SSP5-8.5, up to 26% of the world's sandy coastline (52,100 km) is likely to face severe beach loss by the end of the 21 century. Under a moderate emissions scenario (SSP2-4.5), this projection decreases to 21% (42,080 km), highlighting the potential mitigation gain. The results also show that the vast majority of projected severe sandy beach losses are in high and upper-middle-income countries, with up to 82% of severe losses under SSP5-8.5 and up to 81% under SSP2-4.5 by the end of the 21 century, relative to the total length of sandy coastline, including both hardened and natural coastlines. The IPCC AR6 regions with the highest projected sandy beach losses include Eastern North America, Northern South America, the Mediterranean, the Bay of Bengal, Western Africa, and South-east Asia.
预计海平面上升将导致海岸线长期退缩,影响低海拔沿海地区(LECZ)超过10%的世界人口。由人工结构支撑的沙滩因向陆迁移受限,更容易出现大面积沙滩流失,从而影响生态系统服务。然而,面临“严重沙滩流失”风险的“硬化”沙质海岸线的全球范围尚未得到全面量化。在此,我们利用从卫星图像中获取的产品和地理空间数据集发现,目前全球33%的沙质海岸线已被硬化。按IPCC AR6区域对结果进行分析表明,硬化程度最高的沿海地区是孟加拉湾、西欧和中欧、地中海、北美西部和东亚。将沿海硬化信息与现有的海岸线退缩预测相结合,我们发现,在SSP5-8.5情景下,到21世纪末,全球高达26%的沙质海岸线(约52100公里)可能面临严重沙滩流失。在中等排放情景(SSP2-4.5)下,这一预测降至21%(约42080公里),凸显了潜在的缓解收益。结果还表明,预计的严重沙滩流失绝大多数发生在高收入和中高收入国家,到21世纪末,相对于包括硬化和自然海岸线在内的沙质海岸线总长度,在SSP5-8.5情景下高达82%的严重流失发生在这些国家,在SSP2-4.5情景下高达81%。预计沙滩流失率最高的IPCC AR6区域包括北美东部、南美北部、地中海、孟加拉湾、西非和东南亚。