Monday, July 1, 2013

Drowning Hawaii Under Sea Level Rise

Drowning Hawaii Under Sea Level Rise

By Diana Leone  - Honolulu Star-Bulletin  Sunday, September 23, 2007

It doesn't have the sudden terror of a tsunami or a hurricane. But the sea level around Hawaii is expected to rise 39 inches by the end of the century.

It will come slowly. And once it comes, the water will stay a long, long time.

It will submerge the Ala Wai Boat Harbor, the Hilton Hawaiian Village Lagoon, the banks of the Ala Wai Canal and most of the Ala Wai Golf Course.

Magic Island will be an actual island.

Industrial sites at Campbell Industrial Park will have water lapping at their foundations.

Beaches will be going, going and gone.

Coastal communities throughout the state will be forced to move, raise and abandon buildings and roads that are too close to the rising waters.

"I think this is a slowly emerging catastrophe," geologist Charles "Chip" Fletcher said. "I think it's going to slowly dawn on us."

And this amount of sea level rise is coming, Fletcher said, even if the world takes quick action to slow global warming, because the climate changes are already in motion.

What's in store for Hawaii

What would a 39-inch rise in sea level mean for Hawaii? Charles "Chip" Fletcher from the University of Hawaii-Manoa's School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology predicts:

» In the coming decades, the rising water table will form permanent wetlands, including in urban areas, from which rainfall and storm runoff will not drain.

» Heavy rain, such as in the winter of 2006, will cause flooding lasting weeks.

» Erosion of beaches and other non-rocky shorelines will accelerate.

» High waves will increasingly damage roads and communities near the coast.

» Sea level rise will magnify the effects of storm surge, hurricanes and tsunamis, causing more damage farther inland.

 



With worldwide action to slow global warming, "I think the potential exists for us to stop it at a meter or a meter and a half," he said.

Fletcher's University of Hawaii research team has created aerial maps that depict downtown Honolulu, Waikiki and Kalaeloa as they would look with a one-meter rise in sea level.

The first signs of the change are already here.

During a monthly high tide, "go to Coral Street or Mapunapuna or in Waikiki and pull up a manhole cover and you'll see salt water less than a foot below," Fletcher said.

On Nov. 23, the highest tide of the year, Fletcher predicts sea water will flow out of storm drains on the sides of Ala Wai Boulevard.

"That's going to be the first sense of sea level rise that most people have, pools of water pool around storm drains," Fletcher said. "And if it rains on top of that, rainwater has nowhere to go, so it will puddle."
 
 
Like the low spot on Mapunapuna Road that periodically floods when high tides and heavy rains converge.

Unless there are engineering projects to avert it, such places will become what Fletcher calls "urban wetlands" in coming decades.

"If you look at this map of Waikiki, it's quite obvious that Waikiki at high tide, several decades from now, or at end of the century can't exist the way it is right now," Fletcher said.

Ditto for coastal highways in places where they have been flooded by high surf every couple of years. That will start happening several times a year, agreed Cheryl Anderson, director of the Hazards, Climate and Environment Program at the UH's Social Science Institute.

Government agencies are in the early stages of "working with development plans to think about what these changes might mean," Anderson said.

The 2007 draft revision of the state's Hazard Mitigation Plan, a document required by the Federal Emergency Management Agency to get federal disaster aid, has a new section on climate change, including sea level changes, Anderson said.

In addition to speeding beach erosion, the higher ocean could also more frequently overtop protective reefs during storms -- making wave run-ups go even higher.

"The good news is that it's still a ways off," said Bruce Richmond, U.S. Geological Service specialist in coastal hazards. "We can start to plan for this when we build new highways and construction."

"We're looking at a long-term phased retreat from the coastline," Richmond said. "It starts with zoning and setbacks, so that large expensive public buildings are not put right on the water's edge." Insurance policies that allow rebuilding of damaged structures will have to be re-examined.

"There's plenty of time to adjust to this," Fletcher said. "If we are proactive, we can really begin to get a handle on this problem."
 
Fletcher suggests that:

» Waikiki hotels include sea level rise countermeasures when major renovations are undertaken.

» Somebody drill dozens of test wells in downtown Honolulu and Waikiki to locate the water table and forecast where its rise with the ocean level will cause problems.

» Too-close-to-the-ocean highways be shifted mauka to avoid the rising water.

The state Transportation Department is aware of the sea level rise trend, but is dealing with it by addressing coastal highways that are suffer from high surf erosion now, spokesman Scott Ishikawa said.
A recent example of a fix was the Kalanianaole Highway at Makapuu. On the drawing board for possible movement inland are the Laniakea area on Oahu's North Shore, the Honoapiilani Highway south of Lahaina, and the Hilo Bayfront Highway, Ishikawa said.

The department also is studying trouble spots on the Kamehameha Highway on Oahu's Windward side, he said.

Hilo's pull-back from the ocean after the 1960 tsunami exemplifies changes that eventually might have to be made at vulnerable spots, Anderson said.

Eileen Shea, director of the NOAA (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration) Integrated Data and Environmental Applications Center, praised Fletcher's map as a "a first blush snapshot" that should lead to more in-depth study.

"You and I aren't going to feel the average sea level rise," Shea said. "What we're going to see is how they're going to affect extreme events," because even a few inches of higher sea level can magnify the bad effects of hurricanes and high surf.

"We don't want to create a panic, but we need to make everyone aware that it's something we need to plan for in the future," said Sam Lemmo, administrator of the state Office of Conservation and Coastal Lands.
 

Some signs that Hawaii government officials are beginning to take action:

» Studies of coastal erosion trends have been completed on Maui and are ongoing on Oahu and Kauai. These are used to determine how close to the coast new buildings are allowed.

» The U.S. Geological Survey could begin new studies soon on the effect of sea level rise on coastal areas, including Hawaii.

» Congress will consider requiring states to conduct climate change planning.

» State and federal agencies have jointly printed several books that include information about sea level rise, such as coastal hazard mitigation, coastal erosion and what to look for when buying coastal real estate.

Hawaii's Politicians Ignore Sea Level Rise - Make Tax-Payers Liable

Hawaii's Politicians Ignore Sea Level Rise

Make Tax-Payers Liable For Future Disaster

DROWNING HAWAII

by Kip Aoki   Honolulu Star-Bulletin  Sunday, September 23, 2007
Warmer waters. Melting ice caps. Disappearing glaciers.
They are all expected to raise ocean levels by 39 inches in the next century,
forever reshaping Hawaii.
STORY SUMMARY »
Oceanfront property in Honolulu, about the year 2100:
» McKinley High School.
» The Blaisdell Center.
» Iolani School.
» Honolulu Stadium Park in Moiliili.
That's using the projection of one meter, or 39 inches, of sea level rise, a figure many scientists and planners who have reviewed global climate change predictions say is likely for Hawaii.
Specific projections for areas less populated than urban Honolulu haven't been made, but every island would be affected by climate change in one way or another.



Photo by DENNIS ODA
Marine geologist Charles "Chip" Fletcher uses a yardstick to show what could be the approximate sea level at the Ala Wai Canal in 100 years. "I think this is a slowly emerging catastrophe," Fletcher said.
"I think it's going to slowly dawn on us."
Generally, the more gently sloping land is, the farther inland the new sea level will reach, said Mike Field, a U.S. Geological Survey marine geologist.
"I think 1 meter is a reasonable number," Field said. "Most people agree there is an increase in rise now and that the rate of rise is going to increase over the next century -- conservatively half a meter, more realistically half a meter to a meter."
Said Douglas Tom, manager of the state Coastal Zone Management Branch: "It's a subject that's been on the minds of many different people in many different agencies."
Photo by DENNIS ODA  
Chip Fletcher is a marine geologist at UH who studies coastal changes caused by climate change. Projections show the ocean water level will rise about three feet in the next 100 years. Fletcher places a meter stick at about the high water mark on Waikiki Beach to illustrate the eventual water level, which would submerge this beach scene.

COURTESY UH-MANOA SCHOOL OF OCEAN AND EARTH SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
In the next 100 years ocean levels are expected to rise 39 inches due to global warming. Here is
What Waikiki could look like, according to researchers at the University of Hawaii-Manoa.

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Sea Level Floods, Hotter Climate in Hawaii Isles Coming

 

Sea Level Floods, Hotter Climate in Hawaii Isles Coming

By Jan TenBruggencate
Advertiser Science Writer

Hawai'i in the coming century will face rising temperatures and sea levels, eroding shorelines and more acid in ocean waters as the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere increases.
           
"No one's ready for this," said Charles "Chip" Fletcher, the state's premier coastal geologist.

A map developed by Fletcher to illustrate the impact of a 23-inch rise in sea level — the high end of estimates for the year 2090 — shows parts of Waikiki under water and the Ala Wai Canal "leaking up over its banks at high tide," he said.

The ground floor of the Hawai'i Convention Center, located just steps from the canal, also would be vulnerable.

Springs could start popping up in low regions, and higher elevation areas also would be at risk, as ocean water pushes up into streams.

"When flash flooding occurs, streams won't be able to flow into the ocean. They'll back up and flood," said Fletcher, a University of Hawai'i professor.

Hawai'i residents already are seeing some effects of higher sea levels, such as flooding in Mapunapuna during extraordinary high tides, Fletcher said, adding that "we've seen Ala Moana Beach completely covered with water once or twice a year. In a couple of decades, it'll be happening a couple of times a month."


PREPARING FOR CHANGE

In Hawai'i, preliminary steps are being taken to adapt the Islands to the effects of climate change.

Maui County has established a new coastal building policy that increases shoreline setbacks based on likely erosion in specific areas due to sea level rise, changes in coastal wave and current patterns, and other causes. Kaua'i County is considering a similar policy.

In another initiative, interim UH-Manoa Chancellor Denise Eby Konan earlier this month named a climate change commission comprising climate scientists, lawyers, engineers and others to study the direct effects of climate change here. The panel will be headed by oceanographer Lorenz Magaard, who said sea level rise may be the most critical issue facing this island state.

Others agree.

"Sea level rise is unavoidable, and if that's a couple of feet (over the next century), we're going to have to have adaptation," said Kevin Hamilton, chairman of the UH Meteorology Department and a group leader in the university's International Pacific Research Center, which studies climate variation and predictability in the Asia-Pacific area.

Some hotel industry officials already are considering such adaptations to accommodate predicted sea-level rises in future construction, said Murray Towill, president of the Hawai'i Hotel and Lodging Association.

"I'm aware of discussions at specific (coastal) properties, some of it focused on what to do when the property is rebuilt in the next generation," Towill said.

The climate-change discussion has been energized by the release of initial sections of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's "Climate Change 2007" report. The IPCC is a joint project of the World Meteorological Organization and the United Nations Environment Programme.

"It's an incredibly serious and objective document," said UH oceanographer Axel Timmermann, who wrote three chapters in the IPCC's 2001 report but did not participate in the current one.

Temperatures in the region are estimated to rise 5 to 9 degrees Fahrenheit, making Hawai'i a significantly less comfortable place, particularly in summer. A hotter climate could impact tourism and dry out the landscape.

"Agriculture may be affected (and) ranching. You get more evaporation when it's warmer," said Jim Weyman, meteorologist in charge with the Honolulu Forecast Office of the National Weather Service. Even the fishing industry can be impacted by warming conditions, since some favored species of fish follow specific temperature zones in the ocean, he said.

A sleeper in the climate-change discussion is acidification of the ocean. A weak solution of carbonic acid is formed when water is exposed to carbon dioxide. So, as carbon dioxide builds up in the atmosphere, the oceans turn more acidic.

At Station Aloha, an oceanographic monitoring station in the deep Pacific north of O'ahu, a 20-year record of seawater acidity shows a clear trend to a more acidic ocean.

"It's just really become clear that acidification has become a serious concern," said Roger Lukas, a UH professor of oceanography.

UH oceanographer Dave Karl, a member of the National Academy of Sciences, said oceanic acidification could become one of the most significant affects of the increasing amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. A more acid ocean interferes with the ability of animals and plants to create calcium carbonate, the stuff that makes up limestone, coral, seashells and, among other things, the protective outer layer of a class of organisms called cocolithophores that are at the base of the marine food chain.

"Everybody gets hurt. People all over the world are now looking at this. It will have a bigger effect than coral bleaching ever will," Karl said.

Eventually, organisms will adapt and evolve, but there are likely to be severe disruptions in oceanic production in the meantime, he said.

ECONOMIC IMPACTS

Hawai'i researchers, policymakers and others say the state needs immediately to begin planning for the impacts of climate change because of its potential impacts on coastal property values, the economy and the environment.

"I think the public is somewhat confused (about global climate change). The state of Hawai'i and people generally in the state need to be aware of how this will challenge us," Lukas said.

Vicky Holt Takamine, president of 'Ilio'ulaokalani, a grass-roots coalition of Hawaiian cultural practitioners, and kumu hula, said her group has been pushing for expanded coastal building setbacks and feels there are many other impacts that aren't being considered.

"We're going to have to be a lot smarter about how we build our homes, our communities," she said. "We need to plan for climate change when we give out permits. We're not planning for future generations."

GASES, ENERGY

Sierra Club Hawai'i Chapter chief Jeff Mikulina said it is important not to lose the connection between the impacts of warming and their partial cause: the increasing amounts of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.

"We know enough already to know that the map of the Islands is going to look very different, but we haven't seen much policy response," Mikulina said.

Renowned retired UH oceanographer Klaus Wyrtki said he believes governments and industry will do little to stop climate change, and that the most obvious solution is a controversial one.

"There will and should be attempts to reduce energy consumption, but this will not help much as long as world population is rising. The most important measure would be a switch to atomic energy," Wyrtki said.