Friday, July 7, 2017

The Dutch have solutions to rising seas. The world is watching.

The Erasmus bridge runs over the River Maas in Rotterdam.
For the Dutch, living below sea level is not all about a bunch of dykes and dams, but a way of life
AFP/Getty

From The Independant by Michael Kimmelman

In the waterlogged Netherlands, climate change is considered neither a hypothetical nor a drag on the economy.
Instead, it’s viewed as an opportunity.


The wind over the canal stirred up whitecaps and rattled cafe umbrellas.
Rowers strained toward a finish line and spectators hugged the shore.
Henk Ovink, hawkish, wiry, head shaved, watched from a VIP deck, one eye on the boats, the other, as usual, on his phone.

 Breezanddijk with the GeoGarage platform


Ovink is the country’s globetrotting salesman-in-chief for Dutch expertise on rising water and climate change.
Like cheese in France or cars in Germany, climate change is a business in the Netherlands.
Month in, month out, delegations from as far away as Jakarta, Ho Chi Minh City, New York and New Orleans make the rounds in the port city of Rotterdam.
They often end up hiring Dutch firms, which dominate the global market in high-tech engineering and water management.

That’s because from the first moment settlers in this small nation started pumping water to clear land for farms and houses, water has been the central, existential fact of life in the Netherlands, a daily matter of survival and national identity.
No place in Europe is under greater threat than this waterlogged country on the edge of the Continent.
Much of the nation sits below sea level and is gradually sinking.
Now climate change brings the prospect of rising tides and fiercer storms.

Maps of the Netherlands between the 1st Century AD (left) and 10th Century AD (right)
showing the effect of the constantly sinking coastline.

From a Dutch mindset, climate change is not a hypothetical or a drag on the economy, but an opportunity.
While the Trump administration withdraws from the Paris accord, the Dutch are pioneering a singular way forward.

It is, in essence, to let water in, where possible, not hope to subdue Mother Nature: to live with the water, rather than struggle to defeat it.
The Dutch devise lakes, garages, parks and plazas that are a boon to daily life but also double as enormous reservoirs for when the seas and rivers spill over.
You may wish to pretend that rising seas are a hoax perpetrated by scientists and a gullible news media.
Or you can build barriers galore.
But in the end, neither will provide adequate defence, the Dutch say.

 Ninety per cent of the city of Rotterdam lies below sea level, with the northern districts most at risk from a rising ocean (red shaded areas are 5 metres below sea level)

And what holds true for managing climate change applies to the social fabric, too.
Environmental and social resilience should go hand in hand, officials here believe, improving neighbourhoods, spreading equity and taming water during catastrophes.
Climate adaptation, if addressed head-on and properly, ought to yield a stronger, richer state.

This is the message the Dutch have been taking out into the world.
Dutch consultants advising the Bangladeshi authorities about emergency shelters and evacuation routes recently helped reduce the numbers of deaths suffered in recent floods to “hundreds instead of thousands,” according to Ovink.
“That’s what we’re trying to do,” he said.
“You can say we are marketing our expertise, but thousands of people die every year because of rising water, and the world is failing collectively to deal with the crisis, losing money and lives.”
He ticks off the latest findings: 2016 was the warmest year on record; global sea levels rose to new highs.
He proudly shows off the new rowing course just outside Rotterdam, where the World Rowing Championships were staged last summer.
The course forms part of an area called the Eendragtspolder, a 22-acre patchwork of reclaimed fields and canals – a prime example of a site built as a public amenity that collects floodwater in emergencies.
It is near the lowest point in the Netherlands, about 20 feet below sea level.
With its bike paths and water sports, the Eendragtspolder has become a popular retreat.
Now it also serves as a reservoir for the Rotte River Basin when the nearby Rhine overflows, which, because of climate change, it’s expected to do every decade.

 Rowing teams practice at the Eendragtspolder, a site intended to be both a public amenity and a reservoir for floodwater (Flickr)

The project is among dozens in a nationwide program, years in the making, called Room for the River, which overturned centuries-old strategies of seizing territory from rivers and canals to build dams and dikes.
The Netherlands effectively occupies the gutter of Europe, a lowlands bounded on one end by the North Sea, into which immense rivers like the Rhine and the Meuse flow from Germany, Belgium and France.
Dutch thinking changed after floods forced hundreds of thousands to evacuate during the 1990s.
The floods “were a wake-up call to give back to the rivers some of the room we had taken”, as Harold van Waveren, a senior government adviser, recently explained.
“We can’t just keep building higher levees, because we will end up living behind 10-metre walls,” he said.
“We need to give the rivers more places to flow.
Protection against climate change is only as strong as the weakest link in the chain, and the chain in our case includes not just the big gates and dams at the sea but a whole philosophy of spatial planning, crisis management, children’s education, online apps and public spaces.”

Van Waveren was talking about a national GPS-guided app created so that residents always know exactly how far below sea level they are.
To use public pools unrestricted, Dutch children must first earn diplomas that require swimming in their clothes and shoes.
“It’s a basic part of our culture, like riding a bike,” Rem Koolhaas, the Dutch architect, told me.

 Deltapark Neeltje Jans tells the story of the famous Delta Works
GeoGarage Netherlands NLHO layer

In the Netherlands, scholarly articles about changes to the Arctic ice cap make front-page headlines.
Long before climate change deniers began to campaign against science in the United States, Dutch engineers were preparing for apocalyptic, once-every-10,000-years storms.
“For us, climate change is beyond ideology,” said Rotterdam’s mayor, Ahmed Aboutaleb.
He took me one morning around new waterfront development in a formerly poor, industrial neighbourhood, to show how urban renewal dovetails with strategies to mitigate the effects of climate change.
“If there is a shooting in a bar, I am asked a million questions,” Aboutaleb said of his city.
“But if I say everyone should own a boat because we predict a tremendous increase in the intensity of rain, nobody questions the politics. Rotterdam lies in the most vulnerable part of the Netherlands, both economically and geographically. If the water comes in, from the rivers or the sea, we can evacuate maybe 15 out of 100 people. So evacuation isn’t an option. We can escape only into high buildings. We have no choice. We must learn to live with water.”

 At the artificial island Neeltje-Jans, at one end of the barrier,
a plaque is installed with the words "Hier gaan over het tij, de wind, de maan en wij"
which translates to "Here the tide is ruled by the wind, the moon and we (the Dutch)"

A Moroccan-born Muslim and a rising star in the Dutch political world who denounces religious radicals and reactionary nationalists alike, the mayor runs a traditionally tough, working-class city.
Rotterdam today is anything but a paradise.
It is riven by social fissures and discord over immigration.
But it has begun to improve in recent years as it has become greener and more diverse.
When asked about climate threats, the mayor talks about creating a less divided, more attractive, healthier city – more capable of facing the stresses climate change imposes on society.

“That’s just common sense,” Aboutaleb said.
The Eendragtspolder is one example, he pointed out, repaying Rotterdam’s investment with green spaces and the rowing course, which has the added perk of aiding a prospective Dutch bid for the 2028 Olympics.

 A storm surge in 1953 flooded the Dutch coastline, killing more than 1,800 people (AFP/Getty)

Levelled by bombs during the Second World War, Rotterdam is not quaint and touristic like Amsterdam but industrial, down to earth, a surprisingly stylish sleeper among Europe’s cultural hubs, with a legacy of radical architecture, attracting young designers and entrepreneurs.
Its tradition of openness has made it a magnet for outsiders and helped it recover from years of hardship, when, during the Seventies, Eighties and Nineties, it became notoriously crime-ridden and filthy, a place wealthy people fled.

Lately the city, accustomed to starting over, has reinvented itself as a capital of enterprise and environmental ingenuity.
It has pioneered the construction of facilities like those parking garages that become emergency reservoirs, ensuring that the city can prevent sewage overflow from storms now predicted to happen every five or 10 years.
It has installed plazas with fountains, gardens and basketball courts in under-served neighbourhoods that can act as retention ponds.
It has reimagined its harbours and stretches of its formerly industrial waterfront as incubators for new businesses, schools, housing and parks.

These are all stops on the standard tour for visiting foreign delegations: proof-of-concept urban interventions, if not actually all-encompassing solutions, that address climate threats in ways that incrementally serve the economy and social needs.

“A smart city has to have a comprehensive, holistic vision beyond levees and gates,” as Arnoud Molenaar, the city’s climate chief, put it.
“The challenge of climate adaptation is to include safety, sewers, housing, roads, emergency services.
You need public awareness.
You also need cyber-resilience, because the next challenge in climate safety is cybersafety.
You can’t have vulnerable systems that control your sea gates and bridges and sewers.
And you need good policies, big and small.

“This starts with little things, like getting people to remove the concrete pavement from their gardens so the soil underneath absorbs rainwater,” Molenaar said.
“It ends with the giant storm surge barrier at the North Sea.”

A Vast Floodgate

That would be the Maeslantkering, built near the mouth of the sea, about a half-hour drive west from downtown Rotterdam – the city’s first line of defence.
It is the size of two tubular Eiffel Towers, toppled over.

 The Maeslantkering, an immense sea gate conceived decades ago to protect the port of Rotterdam

In the 20 years since it opened, the Maeslantkering hasn’t actually been needed to prevent a flood, but it is tested regularly just in case.
Picnickers line the shore to watch.
The trial closings are a little like the Dutch version of the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade.

I drove with van Waveren to see it one day.
It is not uncommon here to witness the astonishing sight of ships cruising by overhead.
This happens in a country where the highways are frequently below sea level.

Maeslantkering with the GeoGarage platform

The Maeslantkering is a consequence of repeated historic calamities.
In 1916, the North Sea overwhelmed the Dutch coastline, inaugurating a spate of protective construction that failed to hold back the water in 1953 when an overnight storm killed more than 1,800 people.
The Dutch still call it the Disaster.

 Construction Of Dam In Delta Works Project (1966)

They redoubled national efforts, inaugurating the Delta Works project that dammed two major waterways and produced the Maeslantkering – the giant sea gate, completed in 1997, keeping open the immense waterway that services the entire port of Rotterdam.

Protecting the port is paramount.
Once the world’s busiest, Rotterdam’s port remains the most important in Europe, each year serving tens of thousands of ships from around the world, supplying steel to Germany, petrochemicals to South America and pretty much everything else to everywhere.
The port is still the bedrock industry in this city of more than 600,000, according to port officials, accounting for 90,000 jobs, not to mention another 90,000 workers whose businesses depend on the port, too.

The port supports five oil refineries, whose owners include Shell and the Koch brothers, along with a massive coal-fire power plant.
Officials say the port accounts for 17 per cent of the entire nation’s carbon footprint.
A central paradox – and to sceptics, the ultimate hypocrisy – of this city’s environmental self-branding is that, at heart, Rotterdam’s economy continues to rely on the fossil fuel industry.

How the port eventually transitions to a greener economy, authorities concede, is the greatest challenge they face, along with climate change.
They describe plans for immense wind farms in the North Sea and strategies to capture heat from fuel-burning factories to warm the greenhouses that supply the country’s agricultural yield.
The Netherlands exports nearly $100bn (£786bn) a year in agricultural products, second only to the United States.

In any case, the safe transport of all those raw materials, not to mention the responsibility of keeping the feet of people in the city dry, now and in the future, depends on the Maeslantkering.

The idea behind it, first discussed decades ago, was unprecedented – a monumental gate with two arms, resting on either side of the canal, each arm as tall and twice as heavy as the Eiffel Tower.
It was a staggering work of engineering.
Wim Quist, the architect, devised an object of surpassing beauty, one of modern Europe’s lesser-known marvels.

Van Waveren described how it works.
When the gate is closed, the arms float out onto the canal, meet and lock, the tubes filling with water and sinking onto a concrete bed, making an impenetrable steel wall against the North Sea.
The process takes two and a half hours.
Pressure from the sea is then transferred from the wall to the largest ball joints in the world, embedded in the banks on either side of the river.

Computers, using a closed electronic system to avoid cyberattack, monitor sea levels hourly and can shut the gate automatically – or open it.
This is critical: 30 pumps inside the gate are linked to one of the country’s power grids.
They extract water from the tubes when it is time for the Maeslantkering to be reopened.

If the grid fails, there is a backup grid and, as a last resort, a generator, because even more dangerous than the gate’s not closing is the gate’s not reopening.
In that case, water pouring down from the Rhine and Meuse rivers could not flow into the sea and would overwhelm Rotterdam even more swiftly than the North Sea could.
As Aboutaleb noted, escape would be impossible.

Ovink said only half-jokingly, “the last resort would be to blow it up”.
The Maeslantkering was clearly built with Hollywood disaster-movie scenarios in mind: there are redundancies to redundancies, and the barrier is prepared for the most extreme climate change models, with sea levels rising beyond current forecasts.

Even so, Rotterdam port officials have plans underway to add another two feet to the height of the gate.

The Delta Works in the Netherlands (Holland) is the largest flood protection project in the world.
This project consists of a number of surge barriers, for examples:
1- The Oosterscheldekering is the largest of the 13 ambitious Delta Works series of dams and storm surge barriers and it is the largest surge barrier in the world, 9 kilometres (5.6 mi) long. The dam is based on 65 concrete pillars with 62 steel doors, each 42 metres wide. It is designed to protect the Netherlands from flooding from the North Sea.
2- The Maeslantkering is a storm barrier with two movable arms; when the arms are open the waterway remains an important shipping route however when the arms close a protective storm barrier is formed for the city of Rotterdam. Closing the arms of the barrier is a completely automated process done without human intervention.

Reshaping Neighbourhoods

Beyond the Maeslantkering, back in town, there are countless fortifications, big and small, knitted into streets and squares.
One sunny afternoon, I met Wynand Dassen, manager of Rotterdam’s resilience team, and Paul van Roosmalen, who oversees rooftop development for the city, at the Dakpark, a dyke in a poor, largely immigrant neighbourhood bordering industrial waterfront.
The site of the Dakpark used to be a railway switching station, a grim nowhere place abutting a cluster of social housing blocks.
This was a red-light district, notorious for drug dealers and crime.

The dyke does a lot more than just hold back water.
It has a shopping centre, which the neighbourhood needed, and a park on the roof.
Shops face the waterfront and help pay to keep up the park.
The park slopes from the roof down to streets and housing blocks, creating a grassy hill that links park and neighbourhood.

When the weather is good, sunbathers sprawl on the grassy roof and toss Frisbees.
Formal gardens open onto acres of well-kept lawns.
The park is a kilometre long.
And wonderful.
Its success – not only as a barrier but also as a boon to business and the area – has persuaded officials to consult neighbourhoods and set aside money for community-initiated projects.
“We became invested in getting more people involved in all kinds of civic issues,” Dassen told me, “and water inevitably becomes an integral part of this process.
We believe you get the smartest solutions when communities are engaged and help make the links between water and neighbourhood development.”


 A water plaza in the Spangen neighbourhood of Rotterdam was created to capture floodwater 

Van Roosmalen agreed.
“It’s an example of what you can do if you connect storm-water management with social welfare and neighbourhood improvements,” he said.
“It’s what we mean here in Rotterdam by ‘resilience planning’.”

In a neighbourhood nearby, where drug addicts used to trek all the way from France to buy cheap heroin, I came across Marleen ten Vergert, a single parent supporting a young daughter on a civil servant’s modest salary.
Women in hijabs lugged groceries, old men lounged on park benches and children rode skateboards over broken concrete paths, past aged housing blocks.
One block of houses surrounded a water plaza created to capture floodwater.
Young families were enticed by prices of a single euro to buy abandoned houses around it.
Many families came and went.
The water park was vandalised.
But, slowly, little by little, it has come to be embraced by the neighbourhood.
“Now, for the most part, it works,” Vergert told me.
“People want the water square, so they take better care of it.
There’s a greenhouse nearby run by a Turkish community.
The value of houses in the neighbourhood has gone up.”

A few blocks away, a startup in a converted industrial waterfront building is developing solar-powered sailing drones for collecting plastic trash from the sea, and, back in the middle of the city, a warehouse with a Brooklynesque mix of artisanal food stalls, a circus academy and a pinball museum has rejuvenated a formerly dingy pier.
Where the old Hotel New York, a century-old landmark, used to be the tallest building along a stretch of waterfront, skyscrapers have sprung up, producing a whole new business district in Rotterdam, with a photography museum across the street from the city’s signature office tower, De Rotterdam, by Koolhaas, and Ben van Berkel’s harp-like Erasmus Bridge.

Rotterdam is clearly trying to cast itself as a model of inventive urbanism.
A local businessman, Peter van Wingerden, envisions floating dairy farms along the waterfront.
One in every three trucks coming into the city carries food, he said.
Floating farms would reduce truck traffic and carbon emissions, supplying the city with its own milk.
With the city’s encouragement, he is constructing a $2.2m prototype, for 40 cows, producing a half-million litres (about 130,000 gallons) of milk a year.
“The river is no longer just for industry,” he told me.
“We need to find new uses, which keep us safe from climate change, and help the city grow and prosper.”

That’s the city’s mantra.
When I asked van Wingerden if it was unsettling to live in a waterfront city mostly below sea level, he said: “It seems to us less dangerous than living on the San Andreas Fault.
At least when we flood, we’ll have some warning before our feet get wet.”

To the Dutch, what’s truly incomprehensible, he added, is New York after Hurricane Sandy, where too little has been done to prepare for the next disaster.
People in the Netherlands believe that the places with the most people and the most to lose economically should get the most protection.

The idea that a global economic hub like Lower Manhattan flooded during Hurricane Sandy, costing the public billions of dollars, yet still has so few protections, leaves climate experts here dumbfounded.

Molenaar, Rotterdam’s climate chief, summed up the Dutch view: “We have been able to put climate change adaptation high on the public agenda without suffering a disaster in many years because we have shown the benefits of improving public space – the added economic value of investing in resilience.
“It’s in our genes,” he said.
“Water managers were the first rulers of the land. Designing the city to deal with water was the first task of survival here and it remains our defining job. It’s a process, a movement.
“It is not just a bunch of dykes and dams, but a way of life.”

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