Responsiveness of Ada Sea Defence Project to salt water intrusion associated with sea level rise

Date

2012

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Springer

Abstract

The Ada peninsular in Ghana has suffered rapid coastal erosion and inundation for over half a century, accompanied by loss of property and livelihoods, economic stagnation and salt water intrusion. Government intervened to respond to these threats by implementing a sea defence project. A preliminary assessment indicates the project will deal with some urgent needs of property loss reduction and invigorate livelihood and economic opportunities. However, it will have minimal beneficial impacts on groundwater salinization, and may actually intensify salinity of surface water in the Volta River and adjoining water points by shifting salinity intrusion further upstream to affect hitherto salinity-free areas. The spatial reach of the salinity shift is uncertain. The potential for further sea level rise will aggravate and accentuate the region’s water scarcity dilemma if a coherent water management strategy is not sort sooner. The project demonstrates the limitations of employing static, narrow objectively designed sea defence project as a response to coastal erosion and inundation, because it lacks the capacity to deal with dynamism, complexity and multi-dimensional impacts associated with climate change related sea level rise.

Description

Keywords

COASTAL INUNDATION, SALT WATER INTRUSION, CLIMATE CHANGE, SEA LEVEL RISE, SEA DEFENCE, GHANA, GHANA--ADA AREA, SALINIZATION, COASTAL EROSION, WATER SHORTAGE, COMPLEXITY, DRINKING WATER, COASTAL WATERS, EROSION, DAMS, SEA WALL, WATER QUALITY, ECOSYSTEMS, HARBOUR AND COASTAL ENGINEERING

Citation

Mensah, K. O., & FitzGibbon, J. (2013). Responsiveness of Ada Sea Defence Project to salt water intrusion associated with sea level rise. Journal of Coastal Conservation, 17(1), 75-84. doi:10.1007/s11852-012-0219-y

DOI