Coastal home owners face huge losses from rising sea

SYDNEY (Reuters) – Australians Lesley and Doug  McGrath have for decades battled ocean swells that have eaten  away at the backyard of their multi-million dollar Sydney home.
They bought an old beach shack on Collaroy Beach in 1976  and replaced it with a two storey home anchored to the land by  12 metre (35 feet) long piers, a concrete slab, and an  underground seawall of giant boulders.

Even with all that protection, the fury of the ocean has at  times torn up their backyard, large chunks of prime real estate  disappearing under waves. With scientists predicting a 90cm (3  feet) sea level rise in Sydney by 2050 due to climate change,  the house itself may yet be in danger.

The McGrath home is one of an estimated 700,000 plus  coastal properties in Australia alone that are threatened by  rising seas.

Around the world, owners of prized seaside properties face  the prospect of not just losing their homes but receiving no  compensation as insurance policies may not cover climate change  losses in the future.

“If you live in paradise you accept what the ocean gives  and takes. We’re not worried,” Lesley McGrath told Reuters.

Her family photo album tells an amazing story of their  battle against the ocean: At times, an expansive beach  separates their home from the sea, and at other times, the surf  is so close that photos show her son jumping into the water  from the backyard.

Sea levels are widely expected to rise about one metre (3.3  feet) this century due to climate change, faster than the 18-59  cms (7-23 inches) outlined in a United Nations Climate Panel  report in 2007.

And coastal communities around the world are already  feeling the destructive effects of more frequent and violent  ocean storms — a portent of rising seas.

Powerful storms along China’s coast are washing salt onto  farmland, severely reducing crop yields and there are fears  saltwater may be contaminating vital fresh water aquifers.

The first wave of climate change refugees have started  leaving their island homes in the South Pacific as storm surges  contaminate fresh water supplies and flood coastal crop lands.

“We have a feeling of anxiety, a feeling of uncertainty  because we know that we will be losing our homes. It’s our  identity. It’s our whole culture at stake,” says Ursula Rakova,  from Carteret Island off Bougainville in Papua New Guinea.

Carteret islanders have decided to abandon their island  home for the nearby and bigger Bougainville island after years  of worsening storm surges and king tides infected their fresh  water supplies and ruined their staple banana and taro crops.

Other islanders tell stories of sitting and watching the  ocean slowly devour their homes, and desperately trying to  climate-proof their villages by constructing seawalls, planting  mangroves to halt erosion and testing salt-resistant crops.

“We thought of ourselves as living on the coast. Now the  house where I was born is a couple of hundred metres out to  sea,” says Kini Dunn from Togoru in Fiji.

Despite moving inland, the waves are again breaking on  Dunn’s doorstep, but he is determined not to leave.

“We can not see ourselves moving, even though the ground  our ancestors trod is gradually disappearing into the sea,”  says a defiant Dunn.

Litigation may rise with seas

John Vaughan is fighting in court for the right to try and  save his multi-million dollar beach house.

Waves washed away 800 sq metres (8,600 sq feet) of  Vaughan’s beachfront land in May after a bad cyclone and storm  season, wiping more than one million dollars off the value of  the property, say real estate agents.

Vaughan fears that if he is not allowed to build a stone  seawall, his home may one day become worthless. “I’d be on the  edge of an island and washed away probably,” he told Reuters.

Sydney Coastal Councils, which represents 15 local  governments, says the multi-million dollar price tags of  beachfront homes are unrealistic given climate change.   “A lot of those structures have been put in place without any  consideration of climate change. Private properties in coastal  areas don’t reflect the risk,” says Wendy McMurdo, chair of  Sydney Coastal Councils.

In Australia, 711,000 homes and billions of dollars worth  of assets and infrastructure are at risk from rising sea levels  and storm surges, says Australia’s climate change office.

Coastal flooding and erosion already costs Australia’s most  populous state New South Wales A$200 million a year.

Australia’s coastal authorities fear litigation may rise as  more and more people try to save their properties from storm  surges and rising sea levels or lose property to the ocean.

“It’s in no one’s interest for decisions on the impact of  climate change to be made by the courts,” says McMurdo.

Defend or retreat

Australia is an island continent with 80 percent of its 21  million people living on the coast, but combating rising sea  levels is piecemeal, says McMurdo.

Australian authorities are split on adopting a policy of  retreat or defend against rising seas.

Those opposed to defending the coast argue seawalls and  breakwaters often see the beach lost to a stone structure,  prevent the shoreline from naturally adapting to changing ocean  conditions, and move the problem further along the coast.

Byron Bay, a resort town in Queensland state, has had a  retreat policy for 20 years, angering residents who bought  multi-million dollar beach homes in recent years.

One hour drive north, a defensive line of seawalls and  years of pumping sand onto beaches has replenished the tourist  Gold Coast, protecting them from powerful cyclones this year.

In Sydney, there is little chance of retreat given the high  coastal population. A sea level rise of just 20 cms and a  1-in-50 year storm would see Narrabeen beach recede by 110  metres (361 feet) causing around A$230 million damages.

Sand pumping may help homes at Collaroy Beach, south of  Narrabeen where the local council has a policy of buying  threatened homes, bulldozing them and building protective sand  dunes. In Sydney’s south, a metal sea barrier has been planted  at Cronulla Beach to stop wave erosion of an existing seawall.

Infrastructure at risk

There’s a sign in the heart of Florida’s Everglades  wetlands that sums up the threat of rising sea levels. Located  many miles from any coast, it reads “Rock Reef Pass —  Elevation 3 feet.”

Coastal authorities in Florida routinely replenish beaches  by dredging sand from offshore or importing it from the  Carribbean.

The Florida Keys, Miami Beach, Sanibel and Captiva, and  Palm Beach, the exclusive east coast hideaway of the  super-wealthy, are all built on barrier islands and some  experts believe these sand islands would be swamped by rising  seas.

“With a 3 foot (90 cm) sea level rise, most of the lower  half of the Everglades disappears. Much of the Keys are under  water,” said Brian Soden, professor of oceanography at Miami  University.

But its not just high priced beachhouses that are at risk  from storm surges and rising seas. Parts of Cape Canaveral,  home of the Kennedy Space Center and the space shuttle launch  pads, and Tampa Bay are considered vulnerable to rising seas.

In New York City, with more than 8 million people, a sea  level rise of 1.5 feet by 2050 and a category 3 hurricane could  wash away seaside restaurants and centuries-old homes perched  along Rockaway Beach and near the famed Coney Island boardwalk.  Southern Brooklyn and Queens, Wall Street in lower Manhattan,  and eastern Staten Island could also end up underwater.

In California, nearly $100 billion worth of coastal  property and infrastructure are at risk of severe flooding from  rising sea levels, warns the Pacific Institute, an  environmental think-tank.

Likely flood casualties include the San Francisco and  Oakland international airports, 3,500 miles (5,630 km) of roads  and 280 miles (450 km) of railways, 140 schools, 30 power  plants and 29 wastewater treatment plants, said the Institute.

In Sydney, a city of four million people, its coastal  sewage and stormwater systems work on gravity and rising sea  levels and storm surges threat to overload the ageing  infrastructure.

“The biggest risk is to infrastructure on the coast and  that will be the most expensive risk. A huge amount of  government infrastructure is within that coastal zone in  Sydney, there are hospitals, storage, electricity, water,” says  McMurdo.

No rising sea insurance

American fisherman Shane Wilson loves living on South Padre  Island in the Gulf of Mexico, Texas. But it comes at a price.

Last year a hurricane storm smashed his home, a short  stroll from the seashore, causing $28,000 worth damage.

Insurance covered $19,000 worth of the damages as Wilson  pays about $5,000 a year for a range of insurance, from flood,  wind, rain and hail insurance to catastrophe insurance.

Rising seas will only make Wilson’s home even more  vulnerable to hurricane storm surges and lead to higher  insurance costs.

“The only thing we can do is prepare for it. We have  aluminium shutters for the windows — when you crank them down  they seal everything up,” says Wilson.

In Australia, 19 of the 20 biggest property losses in the  past 40 years have been weather related. Cyclones, storms and  floods account for 80 percent of the total cost of natural  disasters in Australia from 1967-1999.

But in Australia you can not be insured for rising sea  levels and the Insurance Council of Australia does not see that  policy changing, despite identifying 896,000 residential  properties it says have “significant exposure”.

“I do not believe that a commercial (insurance) product, on  present analysis, is viable,” says Karl Sullivan, general  manager, policy risk and disaster planning directorate,  Insurance Council of Australia.

Risk averse insurance firms, with their passion for  actuarial tables and probabilities, are as much in the dark as  everyone else when it comes to the unknown consequences of  climate change.

“If we had this conversation in 100 years time, it would  really be anyone’s guess. It comes down to how well the  community can mitigate the risks that are present there,” says  Sullivan.