Linking Water Infrastructure, Public Health, and Sea Level Rise: Integrated Assessment of Flood Resilience in Coastal Cities

Author:

Allen Thomas R.1ORCID,Crawford Thomas2,Montz Burrell3,Whitehead Jessica4,Lovelace Susan5,Hanks Armon D.5,Christensen Ariel R.5,Kearney Gregory D.3

Affiliation:

1. Old Dominion University, Norfolk, VA, USA

2. Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg, USA

3. East Carolina University, Greenville, NC, USA

4. North Carolina Sea Grant, Raleigh, USA

5. South Carolina Sea Grant Consortium, Charleston, USA

Abstract

Coastal community water infrastructure is increasingly vulnerable to climate-sensitive coastal hazards. Tides, storm surges, rainfall, and salt intrusion affect infrastructure and human health. In case studies of Charleston, South Carolina, and Morehead City, North Carolina, USA, this project sought to advance risk assessment of urban water and wastewater infrastructure and identify linkages to human health impacts as risk evolves with sea level rise. The methodology integrates community infrastructure, health care, emergency resources, geospatial simulation, and a tabletop exercise with planners, emergency managers, public utilities, and health care providers. Resilience is assessed by community participants using interactive online maps, susceptibility indices, and a resilience matrix. Results highlight differential vulnerability, population susceptibility, and elevation uncertainty. We observe similar trends of increasing magnitude, frequency, and impact of flood events on water infrastructure and public health as sea level rises. Implications for tackling challenges across sectors are highlighted for improving coastal resilience.

Funder

Climate Program Office

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Public Administration,Sociology and Political Science,Business, Management and Accounting (miscellaneous)

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