Natural Infrastructure Alternatives Mitigate Hurricane Driven Flood Vulnerability: Application to Tyndall Air Force Base

Abstract

Hurricane frequency and magnitude intensification are expected over the remainder of the twenty-first century. Uncertainty in future projections requires that coastal communities approach adaptation decisions with caution. Traditional approaches are costly and inflexible. Soft policy adaptations are largely unenforceable. Hard, natural adaptations have emerged as an opportunity to partially mitigate the growing risk of extreme flooding, without the large investments required for traditional approaches, where natural infrastructure already exists. Existing literature for natural adaptations has not leveraged intensification expectations for hurricane events. This research uses multihazard damage evaluation software and spatial analysis to investigate placement of dredged sediment as a barrier island maintenance technique to determine economic viability, as compared to no-action alternatives. The efficacy of this strategy is tested against 18 threat and time calibrated scenarios, applied to existing barrier islands at Tyndall AFB. The results illustrate that protection of 7 square miles of existing barrier islands could help avert facility and infrastructure damage from high-intensity hurricane surge events predicted at 2100 by up to 3 orders of magnitude compared to a status quo scenario. The broader implications suggest that planners should look to preserve natural infrastructure that provides surge protection based on the ability to mitigate damages from intensified climate factors

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Mar 01, 2022
Accession Number
AD1174731

Entities

People

  • Kiara L Vance

Organizations

  • Air Force Institute of Technology

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Engineered Resilient Systems

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Air Force
  • Air Force Facilities
  • Business Administration
  • Civil Engineering
  • Climate Change
  • Coastal Engineering
  • Coastal Flooding
  • Ecology
  • Flood Control
  • Flood Damage
  • Geography
  • Governments
  • Organizational Structure
  • Public Administration
  • Sea Level
  • Sea Level Rise
  • Storm Surges
  • Tropical Cyclones
  • United States

Fields of Study

  • Environmental science

Readers

  • Coastal and Marine Engineering/Sediment Transport/Hydraulic Engineering
  • Strategic Security Studies
  • Systems Analysis and Design