Management of the Holderness Coast

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Description and Tags

Coastal Systems

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Conflicts

  • 30 villages has been lost since the Roman Era due to erosion

  • Beliefs that the government and council should focus on coastline protection

  • The management could harm nature and reduce biodiversity

  • 1991 (EU), £2.1 million pounds to save / protect their villages

  • Main strategies: do nothing approach and hold the line

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Protection at Hornsea

  • Popular holiday resort 

  • Spent £5.2 million building / repairing groynes

  • 1.9km of concrete seawalls and rock armour

<ul><li><p><span style="background-color: transparent;"><span>Popular holiday resort&nbsp;</span></span></p></li><li><p><span style="background-color: transparent;"><span>Spent £5.2 million building / repairing groynes</span></span></p></li><li><p><span style="background-color: transparent;"><span>1.9km of concrete seawalls and rock armour</span></span></p></li></ul><p></p>
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Protection at Spurn Head

  • Main strategy: do nothing 

  • Narrow neck so is there any point protecting it? We can’t stop nature 

  • Can no longer spend money to protect it (1995, they stopped trying to protect it at all)

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Impacts of Coastal Management at Hornsea

Groynes are relatively low cost

Terminal groyne syndrome can occur

Groynes are visually acceptable

Groynes require continual maintenance

The development of low-lying land is now possible and the groynes have ensured a wide, sandy beach which attracts thousands of tourists 

There is little material to the south of the defences, meaning even neap tides (lower tidal range) can reach the base of the cliffs

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Impacts of Coastal Management at Spurn Head

Do nothing has saved the growing annual costs of protection

Community of coastguards and their families may have to move somewhere else

Huge cost benefit as there were no major settlements on the spit 

Over washing can damage the salt marsh environments located behind the spit

Not all environmental groups were against the spit becoming detached into an island

There may be a loss of a ‘heritage coast’ site and an important bird habitat