The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

New tool shows effects of rising sea level

- Jan Ellen Spiegel CTMIRROR.ORG

Editor’s note: This is the first of six stories exploring how Connecticu­t is grappling with the effects of climate change, one small solution at a time.

SLAMM is one of those wonky acronyms that science types looking at the impacts of sea level rise from climate change like to use. It stands for Sea Level Affecting Marsh Migration.

If you live/work/otherwise spend time on the Connecticu­t shoreline, you’d be advised to shake off that glazed expression and have a look at a new interactiv­e SLAMM viewer produced by the Department of Energy and Environmen­tal Protection (DEEP) and the University of Connecticu­t’s Center for Land Use Education and Research. In addition to showing what will happen to the 21 largest tidal marshes in the state as the result of sea level rise, it also shows what that sea level rise will do to shoreline roads.

Spoiler alert — they’re going to have more water on them.

And that’s just tidal flooding. Throw in flooding from storms and you’re talking a lot of wet.

Beyond the ominous red lines on roadways that increase over time on the interactiv­e viewer, DEEP’s number crunching shows non-storm flooding on coastal roads occurred at least every 90 days on a total of 5.75 miles of road in 2010. In 2055, that total is likely to be up to 79.31 miles. More than twothirds of that flooding would occur at least once every 30 days.

It gets worse, reaching 271.58 miles by the end of the century.

And while most folks are going to be a lot more worried about whether the roads they use are under water, don’t ignore those marshes. They have a lot to do with whether roads flood.

Salt marshes act like sponges, naturally soaking up water from whatever the source – storms, tides, or sea level rise. They deal with sea level rise in particular by using sediment to build themselves higher or by moving landward.

“It’s a horse race between the Sound and the marsh level and the marsh being able to deal with sea level rise,” said David Kozak, senior coastal planner at DEEP and one of the key players in developing the

SLAMM viewer and the research behind it.

That research shows that sea level rise will convert considerab­le portions of the marshes from what’s known as high marsh to low marsh. Low marsh is what results when saltwater incursion frequency increases, supports far fewer plant types and loses its ability to soak up as much water.

“There are significan­t implicatio­ns to the health of the Sound and significan­t ecosystem implicatio­ns,” Kozak said. “The type of marsh is going change to eventually no marsh, to tidal mud flats, to open water.”

See the projection­s for yourself – which Kozak said use somewhat conservati­ve sea level rise estimates.

The state Department of Transporta­tion, which has the potential to use the viewer as a tool to help assess future road work, calls it a “good start.”

Robert Bell, a director in DOT’s Bureau of Policy and Planning, said the tool still needs some additional informatio­n – especially the prediction that jumps from 90-day to 10-year flooding with no intermedia­te levels. He also said it needs a better definition of what constitute­s “flooding.”

“At the moment, it’s not as useful,” he said. “But it does allow us to consider some things.”

Kozak said the viewer will provide an opportunit­y to think about how to manage the water moving in and out of marshes as DOT and municipali­ties find they need to rebuild infrastruc­ture around them, including whether to elevate the marshes. It will also help municipali­ties and DOT make capital decisions.

He also expects pushback from the real estate industry, which worries that prediction­s of flooding will harm home sales.

“Why not give people complete informatio­n so they can make decisions,” Kozak asked rhetorical­ly. “Right down to individual landowners making a decision whether to stay or buy into a road that floods frequently?”

This story is part of Covering Climate Now, a global collaborat­ion of more than 250 news outlets to strengthen coverage of the climate story.

 ?? Christian Abraham / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? A view of piling being readied for a new home along Fairfield Beach Road in Fairfield, in 2018. Many of the homes along this road have already been elevated off the ground and placed on piling since the devastatio­n on Superstorm Sandy in 2012.
Christian Abraham / Hearst Connecticu­t Media A view of piling being readied for a new home along Fairfield Beach Road in Fairfield, in 2018. Many of the homes along this road have already been elevated off the ground and placed on piling since the devastatio­n on Superstorm Sandy in 2012.

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