Coastal Management: Strategies and Conflicts
Why Coasts Need Managing
Coasts are dynamic and constantly changing. Erosion threatens homes, farmland, transport links, and historic sites. Flooding from storm surges and rising sea levels poses additional risk to coastal communities. Decisions about how — or whether — to defend a coast involve balancing economic costs, engineering feasibility, environmental impacts, and social fairness.
The scale of the UK coastal erosion problem:
- Approximately 28% of the UK coastline is currently experiencing erosion
- England has 17,000 km of coastline; protecting all of it is not economically viable
- The Environment Agency uses Shoreline Management Plans (SMPs) to decide which sections of coast receive what level of protection across 100-year planning horizons
- Hold the line: maintain existing defences
- Advance the line: build new defences seaward of the current position
- Managed retreat: allow the coast to retreat, compensating or relocating affected people and land uses
The guiding principle of modern coastal management is that defending one section of coast has consequences for adjacent sections — sediment trapped behind a sea wall cannot nourish beaches further along the coast.
Hard Engineering Strategies
Hard engineering uses artificial structures to resist or redirect wave energy. These offer strong immediate protection but are expensive, require constant maintenance, and can have negative unintended effects on adjacent coastlines.
| Strategy | How it works | Benefits | Drawbacks |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sea wall | Concrete or rock wall built at the base of a cliff or top of a beach; reflects wave energy away from the cliff | Strong protection; long lifespan (25–30+ years); can double as a promenade | Very expensive (£3–5 million per km); reflects energy back to sea, increasing turbulence and undercutting the wall's own foundation; visually intrusive |
| Groynes | Wooden, concrete, or rock structures built perpendicular to the shoreline; trap sediment moving by longshore drift | Build up beach sediment updrift; cheap (£5–10k per groyne); maintain a wide beach that itself absorbs wave energy | Starve beaches downdrift of sediment; downdrift erosion can be severe — displacing the problem along the coast |
| Riprap (rock armour) | Large boulders (often Norwegian granite) piled at the cliff base or sea wall front; absorb and dissipate wave energy | Relatively cheap (£1–3 million per km); effective at absorbing wave energy; long-lasting | Not aesthetically pleasing; boulders can shift in severe storms; does not address the underlying cliff instability |
| Gabions | Wire-mesh cages filled with rocks, stacked to form a permeable revetment at the cliff base or shoreline | Cheap (£100–500 per cage); flexible — can conform to irregular terrain; permeable so water drains through, reducing pressure; quicker to install than sea walls | Less durable — wire mesh corrodes in salt water within 5–10 years; not suitable where wave energy is very high |
| Offshore breakwaters | Submerged or semi-submerged rock or concrete structures built parallel to the shore; force waves to break before reaching the beach (extra context — beyond AQA 8035 spec) | Reduce wave energy reaching the coast; can encourage deposition forming a tombolo or wider beach | Expensive; can affect navigation, fish habitats, and sediment transport patterns |
Soft Engineering Strategies
Soft engineering works with natural processes to manage coasts, using or restoring natural systems. Generally cheaper, more sustainable, and environmentally beneficial — but may require more land and provide less immediate protection against extreme events.
| Strategy | How it works | Benefits | Drawbacks |
|---|---|---|---|
| Beach nourishment and reprofiling | Nourishment: dredging sediment from the seabed offshore and depositing it on the eroded beach to restore or widen it. Reprofiling: reshaping the existing beach profile by redistributing sediment (e.g. moving shingle from one part of the beach to another) to create a steeper berm that reflects wave energy | Creates a wide beach that absorbs wave energy; aesthetically natural; benefits tourism; relatively cheap (£2–5 million per km) | Temporary — sediment removed by longshore drift within years, requiring repeated operations; source sediment may be ecologically important |
| Dune regeneration (sand dune stabilisation) | Planting marram grass and constructing fencing to trap windblown sand; restricting access to allow dune recovery | Reinforces natural barrier; cheap; good for biodiversity; sustainable | Slow to establish; does not provide immediate flood protection; requires ongoing management |
| Salt marsh creation | Allowing low-lying land to flood, encouraging natural establishment of salt marsh vegetation (extra context — beyond AQA 8035 spec) | Salt marshes absorb wave energy more effectively than a bare coast; biodiversity benefit; CO₂ storage; self-maintaining | Requires abandoning agricultural land; takes decades to fully establish; not suitable for all coastal settings |
Managed Retreat (Strategic Realignment)
Managed retreat abandons the current line of defence, allowing the sea to flood or erode low-lying land, and constructing a new defence line further inland. It is increasingly used where the cost of defending an existing sea wall exceeds the value of the land or properties behind it.
Process:
- A breach is made in the existing sea wall or embankment
- The sea floods the land behind, and salt marsh naturally establishes over years
- A new, more robust embankment is built further inland
- Compensation may be paid to landowners
Advantages:
- Creates salt marsh, which is a highly effective natural wave energy absorber and a priority habitat for wading birds and fish nurseries
- Much cheaper than maintaining or upgrading hard defences in perpetuity
- In the context of sea-level rise, managed retreat may become the only viable long-term option for some low-lying coasts
Conflicts:
- Farmers and landowners lose productive agricultural land (often Grade 1 or 2 arable land)
- Heritage sites or communities cannot be compensated adequately — loss is irreversible
- Local political opposition is intense; few communities vote to abandon their land
Example — Abbotts Hall Farm, Essex (managed retreat, 2002): 84 hectares of coastal farmland deliberately flooded; 115 hectares of salt marsh re-established within a decade; considered a success ecologically and in terms of flood risk reduction for the wider estuary.
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Case Study: Managing the Holderness Coast
The Holderness Coast in East Yorkshire is the fastest-eroding coastline in Europe, retreating at an average of approximately 1.7–2 metres per year. Over the last 2,000 years, more than 30 villages that were recorded in the Domesday Book (1086) have been lost to the sea.
Why Holderness erodes so rapidly:
| Factor | Detail |
|---|---|
| Soft geology | The cliffs are composed of glacial till (boulder clay) deposited during the last ice age; this is weak, structurally unstable, and highly susceptible to erosion and slumping |
| Fetch | Waves from the North Sea have a fetch of up to 500–800 km (from Scandinavia); destructive waves are frequent |
| Longshore drift | Dominant northerly longshore drift removes eroded material southward; eroded cliff sediment is not replaced |
| Lack of beach | A narrow or absent beach provides no buffer against wave attack; the cliff base is directly exposed |
Management at Mappleton: Mappleton is a small village of approximately 50 homes on the Holderness Coast. In 1991, two rock groynes and a rock revetment were installed at a cost of approximately £2 million. The groynes have successfully built up a beach north of Mappleton, protecting the village and the B1242 road.
Unintended consequence: By trapping sediment that would otherwise have moved south, the groynes at Mappleton accelerated erosion at Great Cowden and Cowden Farm (2–3 km south). Farmers here face significantly increased cliff erosion rates — losing several additional metres of cliff per year compared with the period before Mappleton's defences were built. This illustrates the fundamental problem with hard engineering: protecting one location often displaces or worsens the problem elsewhere.
Broader management: Most of the Holderness Coast is designated "no active intervention" in the Shoreline Management Plan — the Environment Agency has determined that the cost of defending the largely agricultural coast exceeds the economic benefit. Only Mappleton, Hornsea, and Withernsea receive significant protection. Remaining communities and farmland face inevitable long-term loss.
Common Exam Mistakes
1. Describing hard engineering without mentioning economic cost or unintended consequences
Sea walls and groynes are expensive to build and maintain, and have negative downstream effects (starving adjacent beaches of sediment). A complete answer includes benefits AND drawbacks for every management strategy named.
2. Treating managed retreat as neglect or abandonment
Managed retreat is a deliberate, planned strategy that creates valuable ecological habitat (salt marsh) and reduces long-term flood risk. It is not the same as simply doing nothing. Frame it as a positive strategic choice with genuine trade-offs.
3. Forgetting the link between groynes and downdrift erosion
Groynes trap sediment by interrupting longshore drift. Sediment that would have nourished beaches further down the coast does not arrive. This creates a clear cause-and-effect chain: groyne at location A → beach builds up at A → sediment starvation at location B → increased erosion at B. Include this downstream consequence in any answer about groynes.
4. Using the same case study for both processes and management
AQA requires a UK coastal case study. Many students use Holderness only for the erosion processes section. The spec requires it to also illustrate management — decision-making, conflicts between different groups, and why some areas receive no protection. Use all dimensions of the case study.
5. Stating beach nourishment is permanent
Beach nourishment is temporary. Sand and shingle replenished today will be moved along the coast by longshore drift within a few years. It is an ongoing, repeat-cost intervention, not a one-time solution. This is a key drawback to include.
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