Halting coastal erosion 'impossible'
SEASIDE areas across the Westcountry will have to abandoned
within two or three generations because the cost of protecting
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Jurassic coast
them from coastal erosion is too high, the new chief of the
Environment Agency has warned.
The sea will reclaim vast stretches of the UK's coastline,
with some vulnerable sections of the coast in this region
evacuated and left to the mercy of the sea, according to Lord
Smith of Finsbury.
His doom-laden predictions warn the Government and local
councils face tough choices over which areas of coast to defend
and which to leave to the water.
The Environment Agency in the Westcountry says places like
Slapton Sands and Dawlish Warren in South Devon, Porlock in
West Somerset, sections of the South West Coast Path and the
Jurassic Coast all face chronic erosion problems.
Lord Smith said: "This is the most difficult issue we are
going to face as an agency. We know the sea is eating away at
the coast in quite a number of places, primarily – but not
totally exclusively – on the east and south coasts."
Although coastal erosion occurs naturally, some
environmental experts have predicted changing weather patterns
will lead to seas levels rising by as much as four metres,
causing irreparable damage to coastal defences, buildings and
roads.
The agency is drawing up plans to decide which areas should
be given priority status based on predictions about where
coastal erosion will cause most damage in the next five, 25, 50
and 100 years.
Lord Smith said: "We are almost certainly not going to be
able to defend absolutely every bit of coast – it would simply
be an impossible task both in financial terms and engineering
terms.
"We will publish next year details of the work that's been
done, where we think the particular threats are, where we think
there is current defence in place. We will begin to talk with
communities where we think defence is not a viable option."
Devon county councillor, Humphrey Temperley, also chairman
of Wessex Region Flood Defence, said parts of the Westcountry
were at risk from erosion.
He said: "There are some real risks and threats to
individual properties and sections of the coast and it is going
to need a lot of money to keep it all in order or put back when
it gets taken away.
"The main threat is to the South West Coast Path, which is
literally worth millions of pounds to the economy every year in
terms of tourists. I was at Trevose Head in Padstow and it has
fallen in 10 or 15 places within a few miles." Government
spending on flood and coastal erosion risk management will rise
to £800 million in 2010/2011 to meet growing demands from
threatened areas.
Lord Smith also said the proposed Severn barrage will
destroy fish stocks and wreck bird habitats.
Slapton in South Devon is one of the areas most threatened
by coastal erosion. The road connecting villages in the area is
built on a shingle ridge and was breached in storms in
2001.
Alan Denbigh, project manager of the Slapton Line
Partnership said: "I endorse what Lord Smith is saying, but
people here are ahead of the game. We have already put together
a plan which envisages losing the road within 50 years.
"While that could have a very serious effect on tourism, we
also think it could have real benefits if we start thinking
about the solutions now."








Comments
by Roger, Surrey
Tuesday, August 19 2008, 10:21AM
“And yet, many billions will be available to fund quangos and consultants to surround the current Government and cover up their inadequacies. This Country will either disappear or be buried under immigration in a few short years.”