Managing Coastal Risks in West Africa

Coastal erosion is a naturally occurring process that is accelerated by human impacts. Artificial stabilization of the shoreline, the deterioration of natural formations, the construction of infrastructure, the extraction of materials, and the proliferation of dams deprive fragile coastal areas of important sediment deposits, which leads to erosion. Degradation of the shoreline reduces the natural protection of coastal areas to storm surges, which, together with heavy precipitation, exposes low-lying areas to flooding. Given the trans boundary nature of the region’s ecosystems, the potential downstream effects of infrastructure, and the importance of the coastline for all sectors, optimal solutions to reduce the risk along West Africa’s coasts can be reached only through multi sectoral action and multinational cooperation. Every national and regional development plan in West Africa should take coastal risks and adaption to climate change into consideration.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank Group
Format: Brief biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2015-01
Subjects:FLOODING, RISKS, WASTE WATER, ECOSYSTEM, STORM, EARLY WARNING, DISASTER RISK, CLIMATE CHANGE, HIGH TIDES, BEACHES, RISK REDUCTION, NATURE, WATER DRAINAGE, AQUACULTURE, LAND USE PLANNING, BANK, STORMS, RAPID POPULATION GROWTH, CONTINGENCY PLANS, FORESTS, PROTECTION, STABILIZATION, AGRICULTURAL LANDS, DAMAGE, SHORELINES, COASTAL AREAS MANAGEMENT, DISASTER, COASTAL ZONE, ISLANDS, WATER RESOURCES, EROSION, COASTS, SEDIMENT, LAND, ECOSYSTEMS, COASTLINE, MANGROVE, COAST, RISK, ESTUARIES, LEADS, POPULATION GROWTH, SHORELINE, STORM SURGES, DISASTER RISK REDUCTION, CONSTRUCTION, WATER, COASTAL EROSION, COASTAL ENVIRONMENTS, SEA-LEVEL, LIVELIHOODS, SEA, DISASTERS, TIDES, COASTLINES, STORM WATER, SEA LEVEL, SWAMPS, MANGROVE FORESTS, COASTAL AREAS, FISHING, LAGOONS, LAND USE,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/11/25486902/managing-coastal-risks-west-africa
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/24281
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spelling dig-okr-10986242812021-04-23T14:04:21Z Managing Coastal Risks in West Africa World Bank Group FLOODING RISKS WASTE WATER ECOSYSTEM STORM EARLY WARNING DISASTER RISK CLIMATE CHANGE HIGH TIDES BEACHES RISK REDUCTION NATURE WATER DRAINAGE AQUACULTURE LAND USE PLANNING BANK STORMS RAPID POPULATION GROWTH CONTINGENCY PLANS FORESTS PROTECTION STABILIZATION AGRICULTURAL LANDS DAMAGE SHORELINES COASTAL AREAS MANAGEMENT DISASTER COASTAL ZONE ISLANDS WATER RESOURCES EROSION COASTS SEDIMENT LAND ECOSYSTEMS COASTLINE MANGROVE COAST RISK ESTUARIES LEADS POPULATION GROWTH SHORELINE STORM SURGES DISASTER RISK REDUCTION CONSTRUCTION WATER COASTAL EROSION COASTAL ENVIRONMENTS SEA-LEVEL LIVELIHOODS SEA DISASTERS TIDES COASTLINES STORM WATER SEA LEVEL SWAMPS MANGROVE FORESTS COASTAL AREAS FISHING LAGOONS LAND USE Coastal erosion is a naturally occurring process that is accelerated by human impacts. Artificial stabilization of the shoreline, the deterioration of natural formations, the construction of infrastructure, the extraction of materials, and the proliferation of dams deprive fragile coastal areas of important sediment deposits, which leads to erosion. Degradation of the shoreline reduces the natural protection of coastal areas to storm surges, which, together with heavy precipitation, exposes low-lying areas to flooding. Given the trans boundary nature of the region’s ecosystems, the potential downstream effects of infrastructure, and the importance of the coastline for all sectors, optimal solutions to reduce the risk along West Africa’s coasts can be reached only through multi sectoral action and multinational cooperation. Every national and regional development plan in West Africa should take coastal risks and adaption to climate change into consideration. 2016-05-17T19:58:13Z 2016-05-17T19:58:13Z 2015-01 Brief http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/11/25486902/managing-coastal-risks-west-africa http://hdl.handle.net/10986/24281 English en_US West Africa Coastal Areas Management Program Knowledge Sheet;3 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Brief Africa West Africa
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
en_US
topic FLOODING
RISKS
WASTE WATER
ECOSYSTEM
STORM
EARLY WARNING
DISASTER RISK
CLIMATE CHANGE
HIGH TIDES
BEACHES
RISK REDUCTION
NATURE
WATER DRAINAGE
AQUACULTURE
LAND USE PLANNING
BANK
STORMS
RAPID POPULATION GROWTH
CONTINGENCY PLANS
FORESTS
PROTECTION
STABILIZATION
AGRICULTURAL LANDS
DAMAGE
SHORELINES
COASTAL AREAS MANAGEMENT
DISASTER
COASTAL ZONE
ISLANDS
WATER RESOURCES
EROSION
COASTS
SEDIMENT
LAND
ECOSYSTEMS
COASTLINE
MANGROVE
COAST
RISK
ESTUARIES
LEADS
POPULATION GROWTH
SHORELINE
STORM SURGES
DISASTER RISK REDUCTION
CONSTRUCTION
WATER
COASTAL EROSION
COASTAL ENVIRONMENTS
SEA-LEVEL
LIVELIHOODS
SEA
DISASTERS
TIDES
COASTLINES
STORM WATER
SEA LEVEL
SWAMPS
MANGROVE FORESTS
COASTAL AREAS
FISHING
LAGOONS
LAND USE
FLOODING
RISKS
WASTE WATER
ECOSYSTEM
STORM
EARLY WARNING
DISASTER RISK
CLIMATE CHANGE
HIGH TIDES
BEACHES
RISK REDUCTION
NATURE
WATER DRAINAGE
AQUACULTURE
LAND USE PLANNING
BANK
STORMS
RAPID POPULATION GROWTH
CONTINGENCY PLANS
FORESTS
PROTECTION
STABILIZATION
AGRICULTURAL LANDS
DAMAGE
SHORELINES
COASTAL AREAS MANAGEMENT
DISASTER
COASTAL ZONE
ISLANDS
WATER RESOURCES
EROSION
COASTS
SEDIMENT
LAND
ECOSYSTEMS
COASTLINE
MANGROVE
COAST
RISK
ESTUARIES
LEADS
POPULATION GROWTH
SHORELINE
STORM SURGES
DISASTER RISK REDUCTION
CONSTRUCTION
WATER
COASTAL EROSION
COASTAL ENVIRONMENTS
SEA-LEVEL
LIVELIHOODS
SEA
DISASTERS
TIDES
COASTLINES
STORM WATER
SEA LEVEL
SWAMPS
MANGROVE FORESTS
COASTAL AREAS
FISHING
LAGOONS
LAND USE
spellingShingle FLOODING
RISKS
WASTE WATER
ECOSYSTEM
STORM
EARLY WARNING
DISASTER RISK
CLIMATE CHANGE
HIGH TIDES
BEACHES
RISK REDUCTION
NATURE
WATER DRAINAGE
AQUACULTURE
LAND USE PLANNING
BANK
STORMS
RAPID POPULATION GROWTH
CONTINGENCY PLANS
FORESTS
PROTECTION
STABILIZATION
AGRICULTURAL LANDS
DAMAGE
SHORELINES
COASTAL AREAS MANAGEMENT
DISASTER
COASTAL ZONE
ISLANDS
WATER RESOURCES
EROSION
COASTS
SEDIMENT
LAND
ECOSYSTEMS
COASTLINE
MANGROVE
COAST
RISK
ESTUARIES
LEADS
POPULATION GROWTH
SHORELINE
STORM SURGES
DISASTER RISK REDUCTION
CONSTRUCTION
WATER
COASTAL EROSION
COASTAL ENVIRONMENTS
SEA-LEVEL
LIVELIHOODS
SEA
DISASTERS
TIDES
COASTLINES
STORM WATER
SEA LEVEL
SWAMPS
MANGROVE FORESTS
COASTAL AREAS
FISHING
LAGOONS
LAND USE
FLOODING
RISKS
WASTE WATER
ECOSYSTEM
STORM
EARLY WARNING
DISASTER RISK
CLIMATE CHANGE
HIGH TIDES
BEACHES
RISK REDUCTION
NATURE
WATER DRAINAGE
AQUACULTURE
LAND USE PLANNING
BANK
STORMS
RAPID POPULATION GROWTH
CONTINGENCY PLANS
FORESTS
PROTECTION
STABILIZATION
AGRICULTURAL LANDS
DAMAGE
SHORELINES
COASTAL AREAS MANAGEMENT
DISASTER
COASTAL ZONE
ISLANDS
WATER RESOURCES
EROSION
COASTS
SEDIMENT
LAND
ECOSYSTEMS
COASTLINE
MANGROVE
COAST
RISK
ESTUARIES
LEADS
POPULATION GROWTH
SHORELINE
STORM SURGES
DISASTER RISK REDUCTION
CONSTRUCTION
WATER
COASTAL EROSION
COASTAL ENVIRONMENTS
SEA-LEVEL
LIVELIHOODS
SEA
DISASTERS
TIDES
COASTLINES
STORM WATER
SEA LEVEL
SWAMPS
MANGROVE FORESTS
COASTAL AREAS
FISHING
LAGOONS
LAND USE
World Bank Group
Managing Coastal Risks in West Africa
description Coastal erosion is a naturally occurring process that is accelerated by human impacts. Artificial stabilization of the shoreline, the deterioration of natural formations, the construction of infrastructure, the extraction of materials, and the proliferation of dams deprive fragile coastal areas of important sediment deposits, which leads to erosion. Degradation of the shoreline reduces the natural protection of coastal areas to storm surges, which, together with heavy precipitation, exposes low-lying areas to flooding. Given the trans boundary nature of the region’s ecosystems, the potential downstream effects of infrastructure, and the importance of the coastline for all sectors, optimal solutions to reduce the risk along West Africa’s coasts can be reached only through multi sectoral action and multinational cooperation. Every national and regional development plan in West Africa should take coastal risks and adaption to climate change into consideration.
format Brief
topic_facet FLOODING
RISKS
WASTE WATER
ECOSYSTEM
STORM
EARLY WARNING
DISASTER RISK
CLIMATE CHANGE
HIGH TIDES
BEACHES
RISK REDUCTION
NATURE
WATER DRAINAGE
AQUACULTURE
LAND USE PLANNING
BANK
STORMS
RAPID POPULATION GROWTH
CONTINGENCY PLANS
FORESTS
PROTECTION
STABILIZATION
AGRICULTURAL LANDS
DAMAGE
SHORELINES
COASTAL AREAS MANAGEMENT
DISASTER
COASTAL ZONE
ISLANDS
WATER RESOURCES
EROSION
COASTS
SEDIMENT
LAND
ECOSYSTEMS
COASTLINE
MANGROVE
COAST
RISK
ESTUARIES
LEADS
POPULATION GROWTH
SHORELINE
STORM SURGES
DISASTER RISK REDUCTION
CONSTRUCTION
WATER
COASTAL EROSION
COASTAL ENVIRONMENTS
SEA-LEVEL
LIVELIHOODS
SEA
DISASTERS
TIDES
COASTLINES
STORM WATER
SEA LEVEL
SWAMPS
MANGROVE FORESTS
COASTAL AREAS
FISHING
LAGOONS
LAND USE
author World Bank Group
author_facet World Bank Group
author_sort World Bank Group
title Managing Coastal Risks in West Africa
title_short Managing Coastal Risks in West Africa
title_full Managing Coastal Risks in West Africa
title_fullStr Managing Coastal Risks in West Africa
title_full_unstemmed Managing Coastal Risks in West Africa
title_sort managing coastal risks in west africa
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2015-01
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/11/25486902/managing-coastal-risks-west-africa
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/24281
work_keys_str_mv AT worldbankgroup managingcoastalrisksinwestafrica
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