Los Angeles Times

Southland cliffs are on losing end of rising sea

They could recede by more than 130 feet by 2100, study says

- By Rosanna Xia

It’s not just beaches and sand that are disappeari­ng as the ocean pushes inland. Sea level rise is also eating away at California’s coastal cliffs.

The question is by how much, as California­ns have heavily developed and continue to build along the edge of the Pacific.

Scientists are now one step closer to projecting how these bluffs will fare this century — and the outlook is sobering. In Southern California, cliffs could recede more than 130 feet by the year 2100 if the sea keeps rising, according to a new study led by the U.S. Geological Survey.

“It’s a pretty big number,” said Pat Limber, a coastal geomorphol­ogist and lead author of the study. “Hopefully this model will give coastal managers a broadscale picture of how the cliffs might respond to sea level rise, so that they can start planning for the future.”

The consequenc­es of this erosion could be severe on major roads along the Palos Verdes Peninsula. In Malibu and other coastal cities, blocks of homes, parks and public facilities could be lost to the sea under such projection­s.

These forecasts could help provide a road map for the daunting decisions that coastal communitie­s must confront sooner rather than later.

Evacuating — and then coming back to — clifftops hammered by the ocean have become par for the course in towns such as Pacifica and along Highway 1, which was buried last year in a landslide south of Big Sur and then rebuilt atop the debris.

From San Diego County to Santa Cruz, local disputes have intensifie­d over how many more sea walls to build to fend off rising waters — and who will pay to maintain them each year. Others have debated whether to let go, move farther inland and allow Mother Ocean to have her way.

The study uses a sophistica­ted model that synthesize­s existing data and conclusion­s on how sea level rise could affect these defining features of California’s coast. Its findings establish a more concrete time frame for communitie­s in the southern part of the state as they grapple with what to prioritize.

“This is a significan­t amount of erosion, and it’s something that we need to be preparing for now, not later,” said Heather Cooley of the Pacific Institute, an Oakland-based think tank that has studied the socioecono­mic effects of sea level rise in California. “We’re talking about very high-value real estate — there’s private properties, there’s public infrastruc­ture, we have roads, we have treatment plants, there’s even considerat­ion of building desalinati­on plants in some of these areas. All of those facilities would be at risk from this erosion.”

The USGS study, published this month in the Journal of Geophysica­l Research: Earth Surface, examined cliffs from San Diego to Point Conception. Using sea level rise scenarios ranging from 0.5 to 2 meters (1.6 to 6.6 feet), researcher­s stitched together five previous models — incorporat­ing their varying uncertaint­ies and assumption­s, as well as historical erosion rates — and ultimately reached a consensus that the cliffs will erode on average 19 to 41 meters (62 to 135 feet) by the end of the century.

“We tried to tie in the uncertaint­ies as plainly as possible,” Limber said, “so that we can better communicat­e it to the people who are using this informatio­n.”

He noted these projection­s might even be on the conservati­ve end, given that California policymake­rs are now considerin­g 3 meters as the higher end of expected sea level rise.

Oceanfront property owners often react to the threat of erosion by armoring the coast with sea walls or temporary rock walls — about one-fifth of Southern California’s coastline is al-help ready armored and that proportion is likely to grow, the study noted. But increased protection prevents the cliffs from eroding and providing the natural supply of sand to beaches. It also enables more developmen­t in already vulnerable locations, which, in turn, further increases the risk.

Reinforcem­ent also fixes the cliff in place, so as the sea level rises, the beach in front gets submerged because it cannot migrate inland. This coastal squeeze is already happening. A study last year by the same USGS team projected that up to twothirds of Southern California’s beaches could disappear by 2100 because of similar pressures from rising water and human interrupti­ons to sediment flow.

Coastal managers thus face the difficult decision of prioritizi­ng either private property or public beaches by permitting or prohibitin­g cliff armoring. Further research on how beach cliff systems respond to climate change, Limber said, would improve the forecastin­g tools needed to make these kinds of choices.

Like hurricane and climate forecastin­g, projecting how much erosion will accelerate due to sea level rise, while inherently difficult, is in increasing demand. Better data to feed into these models will also lead to forecasts with greater certainty.

“This particular method, the idea of using multiple models, is a really nice step forward,” said Adam Young, a project scientist at the Scripps Institutio­n of Oceanograp­hy who has spent years collecting data on cliff erosion in California. “There are a lot of different models out there and it’s hard to say which one is best. By looking at all of them, it really gives you a sense of where the future may be.”

Cliffs are particular­ly difficult to study because they tend to erode slowly over time, punctuated with sudden losses from landslides or collapse during a storm. The strength of the rock, cliff height, sediment compositio­n, the slope of the beach, the slope of the seafloor, wave action, human interventi­on and other variables come with their own uncertaint­ies.

And scientists often think in averages, experts note, which has been a challenge when talking about cliff erosion and other climate change issues. Stretched over a long period of time, an average — however extreme the changes may be — might not sound like much. But the overall change can be vast.

Losing an average of 1.7 feet of cliff per year over 80 years, for example, might not sound as urgent as losing 135 feet by the end of the century.

Patrick Barnard, research director of the USGS Climate Impacts and Coastal Processes Team and a coauthor of the study, said forecasts can help communitie­s better understand their risks and the consequenc­es of their decisions.

“However you manage the coast, there’s going to be ramificati­ons,” said Barnard, whose team is wrapping up projection­s for the Central Coast and will work on Northern California next.

Environmen­tal decisions, of course, aren’t just made at the local level. As the Earth continues to get warmer and land ice continues to melt into the ocean — in large part fueled by human-produced greenhouse gases — efforts to rein in these emissions could play a role in how fast the sea will rise. The model itself shows a range of erosion from 62 to 135 feet, illustrati­ng the effects of choices to be made this century.

“There’s a range here, where it’s not as bad under lower sea level rise projection­s,” said Cooley of the Pacific Institute. “We have to get serious about reducing greenhouse gas emissions.”

 ?? Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ?? MAUREEN SASSOON hikes in Rancho Palos Verdes. A study examined cliffs from San Diego to Point Conception to project the rate of bluff erosion by 2100, which could severely affect homes, parks and facilities.
Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times MAUREEN SASSOON hikes in Rancho Palos Verdes. A study examined cliffs from San Diego to Point Conception to project the rate of bluff erosion by 2100, which could severely affect homes, parks and facilities.
 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? POINT DUME Nature Preserve in Malibu. Findings from the study establish a time frame so that Southern California communitie­s get a broad-scale picture of how the cliffs might respond to sea level rise, helping officials and residents plan for the future.
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times POINT DUME Nature Preserve in Malibu. Findings from the study establish a time frame so that Southern California communitie­s get a broad-scale picture of how the cliffs might respond to sea level rise, helping officials and residents plan for the future.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States