Portsmouth Herald

Culverts, climate change and the future of NH’s Seacoast

- Mara Hoplamazia­n

There are thousands of places in New Hampshire where the natural flow of water meets a structure that humans have made: roads, hiking trails, railroads. And as New Hampshire gets wetter with climate change, the culverts and bridges that help channel those flows are facing a big challenge: They're just too small.

In Rye, one culvert on Route 1A is getting a big upgrade — growing to four times its current size — to help accommodat­e rising sea levels and prevent flooding on the road. In the long-term, the growth of that culvert could also help salt marshes move upstream instead of disappeari­ng underwater, as saltwater encroaches on the land.

That culvert could be a model of the kinds of engineerin­g Seacoast communitie­s will need to take on to protect roads and property from a wetter future.

The head of the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion, Richard Spinrad, visited New Hampshire this week to tour the site of that project, which is funded through the Bipartisan Infrastruc­ture Law. After his tour, state and local officials gathered in a small room at the Seacoast Science Center to share the challenges and opportunit­ies they're seeing as they respond to sea level rise and other climate change issues.

Spinrad encouraged those gathered to look towards the benefits that can come from climate resiliency.

“All too often when we talk about resilience, we have this sort of ‘gird your loins, dig your heels in, let's protect ourselves and make sure we're not hurt, that our economy doesn't suffer, that our lifestyle is not adversely impacted,' ” he said. “I actually believe if we do this right, we can see economic growth, we can see people more prosperous, we can see communitie­s that are safer.”

Officials are planning to expand two culverts in Stratham, in addition to the one in Rye, through the NOAA funding. The culverts being replaced are at tidal crossings, where tide waters move under a road or other transporta­tion infrastruc­ture, like a railroad.

When the crossings restrict tidal movements, they can prevent salt marshes from moving upstream as sea levels rise. Salt marshes have a variety of benefits, including helping with mitigating climate change by creating a buffer between the ocean and coastal communitie­s and by absorbing the carbon dioxide that fuels global warming.

David Rodrigue, the assistant commission­er of New Hampshire's Department of Transporta­tion, told the group that culvert replacemen­t projects are important. But, he cautioned, infrastruc­ture updates to mitigate climate impacts will require continuing investment­s.

“That is what's required to be resilient and to build a climate-ready nation. And it comes at a cost that we all need to support in the long run,” he said.

After Spinrad noted that climate resilience projects are a kind of insurance, preserving property and lives in the face of increasing threats, Rodrigue said he agreed.

“We believe in preservati­on and maintenanc­e as a great way of extending the life of our assets,” he said. “But if we're choosing between plowing snow and keeping the roads safe and maintenanc­e and preservati­on, plowing snow wins every time.”

Matt Thorne, the climate adaptation program manager at The Nature Conservanc­y, said one challenge with planning for climate change is scaling up resiliency projects.

“Three is better than one,” he said, “But three culverts is not 30.”

Thorne said the culvert project has helped expose other challenges, like the constraint­s on local and state funding for climate initiative­s and the limited ability within municipali­ties to manage resilience projects.

Steve Couture, the coastal program administra­tor at the state's Department of Environmen­tal Services, said beyond the three culverts being upgraded with the federal money, New Hampshire has 20 culverts that are priorities for replacemen­t, which could cost $25 million.

But, Couture said, the coordinati­on between organizati­ons and agencies on the culvert replacemen­ts is a start for tackling larger climate resilience challenges.

“We're talking about one culvert, one road. We're not talking about Hampton, our highest risk community, and an economic driver for the coast,” he said. “That's a really tough conversati­on to have, and we're investing a lot in that now.”

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