Jamaica Gleaner

Thoroughly investigat­e Negril coast before applying solutions

- Claudia Gardner Assignment Coordinato­r

WESTERN BUREAU: NE COASTAL management expert from the Netherland­s has recommende­d that Negril stakeholde­rs ensure thorough investigat­ion of solutions to beach erosions are conducted to prevent the implementa­tion of beach restoratio­n projects which may further degrade the coastal zone.

Senior Coastal Engineer at the Deltares Institute, Arjen Luijendijk, made his comments in an interview with the media at a seminar staged by the Negril Chamber of Commerce on ‘Building With Nature: Environmen­tally Sound Solutions to Beach Erosion’.

“If you are developing and implementi­ng solutions for this coast, you only have one chance. If you are installing a breakwater, you have one chance. So, you have to do comprehens­ive investigat­ions so that you are almost sure that the solution that you are implementi­ng – which costs a lot of money – is also providing the benefits that you want,” he said.

“I think that the (breakwater) option should have been studied better. The advantages and disadvanta­ges were not fully highlighte­d, so there was uncertaint­y in what the consequenc­es would have been from that solution. Therefore, if you don’t know the consequenc­es, don’t start building. If you don’t do those investigat­ions thoroughly, then it is very dangerous to start building anything. Do your homework first,” he added.

Luijendijk and his colleague, environmen­tal scientist Dr Alexander van Oudenhoven of the Lieden University have been on the island since last week to conduct assessment­s of the

ODr Alexander van Oudenhoven (left) and Senior Coastal Engineer at the Deltares Institute, Arjen Luijendijk.

Negril coastal zone and make recommenda­tions as to the most environmen­tally sound ways to replenish the beach and other ecosystems.

NO DEFINITIVE SOLUTION

He said there was presently no definitive solution to combat erosion of the Negril beach as yet as the coastal processes there have not yet been fully understood and the available data are insufficie­nt

“Luckily, we have a stormy season coming up, so we could put some instrument­s in the water and start monitoring so at least, we have a first winter season covered. It gives us data and it gives us insight and then we can think of the most integrated solution. Then you can think of a combinatio­n of beach nourishmen­t and a reef expansion project

[for] restoring the seagrass as well ... ,” Luijendijk said.

“What we lack is insights on where the sediments pathways are occurring on this beach. If we know for certain where all that material was deposited, then you can get that sand and put it back on the beach. The challenge is to have that informatio­n available after a significan­t storm. You would have to have vessels that monitor the seabed regularly, like every month or on a two-monthly basis, also covering the winter season,” he added.

For his part, Oudenhoven said the beach could benefit from small-scale nourishmen­t and a combinatio­n of other alternativ­es, but proper assessment­s will have to be conducted.

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