RESILIENCE AND VULNERABILITY TO CLIMATE CHANGE: CHALLENGES OF TEMPORAL AND GEOGRAPHICAL SCALES FOR GEOTECHNICAL ENGINEERING

被引:0
|
作者
El-Zein, Abbas [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Sydney, Sch Civil Engn, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia
来源
AUSTRALIAN GEOMECHANICS JOURNAL | 2016年 / 51卷 / 02期
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
P5 [地质学];
学科分类号
0709 ; 081803 ;
摘要
The interaction between water and soil particles lies at the heart of the work of geotechnical and geo-environmental engineers. The water content of the subsurface is an important state variable influencing soil behaviour in relation to strength and stability, hydrologic and chemical insulation, sediment budgets and transport and support for biological life. The capacity of many soils to maintain high shear strength and withstand loads applied to them without significant deformation, crushing or erosion, their ability to insulate contaminated sites and filter heavy metals and organic chemicals out of polluted water and their effectiveness in supporting healthy biological life for food production and other ecosystem services, are all examples of vital, and sometimes conflicting services, that soils provide and which are critically dependent on water content. Three major sources of ecological and social change are reasonably certain in the 21st century: a) increased urbanisation with more demands placed on subsurface systems and structures, by the energy, transport, mining and environmental sectors b) increased frequencies, magnitude and duration of droughts and floods as a result of anthropogenic climate change, with likely changes to patterns of precipitation and water retention and c) significant rise in sea levels as a result of thermal expansion and melting of glaciers, leading to higher risks of erosion of coastal land and weakening of coastal foundations with possible damage to private properties and critical water, wastewater, telecommunications and transport infrastructure. The paper's goal is threefold. First, different pathways for the impacts of climate change on subsurface systems are described through the lens of soil-water and land-ocean interactions. Second, a case study from Callala beach in Shoalhaven is presented to illustrate the complexity of making adaptation choices at the interface between land and water, especially as a result of uncertainty and unusual temporal and geographical scales of the problems. Third, the readiness of geotechnical education and practice to deal with these problems is discussed in the context of the difference between risk and vulnerability and the emerging distinction between incremental and transformational adaptation. The paper calls on the geotechnical community to engage more fully in the debate on adaptation to climate futures, going beyond the technical assessment of the integrity of infrastructure systems, and identifying long-term strategies for the conflicting demands we place on the subsurface. This will require innovations and possibly some extension of the spatial and temporal scopes of our experimental, analytical and theoretical methodologies.
引用
收藏
页码:65 / 76
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Climate Change and Resilience Perspectives Brazilian Museums and Their Challenges
    Rosario da Silva, Marcus Vinicius
    Ornstein, Sheila Walbe
    MUSEUM WORLDS, 2022, 10 (01) : 48 - 60
  • [22] Editorial: Seismic resilience, vulnerability and energy efficiency in respect of climate change
    Ademovic, Naida
    Farsangi, Ehsan Noroozinejad
    Hadzima-Nyarko, Marijana
    Formisano, Antonio
    Oliveira, Daniel V.
    FRONTIERS IN BUILT ENVIRONMENT, 2023, 9
  • [23] Resilience of trees and the vulnerability of grasslands to climate change in temperate Australian wetlands
    Neil Saintilan
    Sharon Bowen
    Owen Maguire
    Sara S. Karimi
    Li Wen
    Megan Powell
    Matthew J. Colloff
    S. Sandi
    P. Saco
    J. Rodriguez
    Landscape Ecology, 2021, 36 : 803 - 814
  • [24] Resilience of trees and the vulnerability of grasslands to climate change in temperate Australian wetlands
    Saintilan, Neil
    Bowen, Sharon
    Maguire, Owen
    Karimi, Sara S.
    Wen, Li
    Powell, Megan
    Colloff, Matthew J.
    Sandi, S.
    Saco, P.
    Rodriguez, J.
    LANDSCAPE ECOLOGY, 2021, 36 (03) : 803 - 814
  • [25] Contributions towards climate change vulnerability and resilience from institutional economics
    Diaz Simal, Pedro
    Torres Ortega, Saul
    ECONOMIA AGRARIA Y RECURSOS NATURALES, 2011, 11 (01): : 143 - 159
  • [26] Vulnerability and resilience of power systems infrastructure to natural hazards and climate change
    Schweikert, Amy E.
    Deinert, Mark R.
    WILEY INTERDISCIPLINARY REVIEWS-CLIMATE CHANGE, 2021, 12 (05)
  • [27] Subsistence societies, globalisation, climate change and genocide: discourses of vulnerability and resilience
    Levene, Mark
    Conversi, Daniele
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HUMAN RIGHTS, 2014, 18 (03): : 281 - 297
  • [28] Reframing vulnerability and resilience to climate change through the lens of capability generation
    Shepherd, Philippa M.
    Dissart, Jean-Christophe
    ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS, 2022, 201
  • [29] Assessing water resources vulnerability and resilience of southern Taiwan to climate change
    Li, Ming-Hsu
    Tseng, Kai-Jia
    Tung, Ching-Pin
    Shih, Dong-Sin
    Liu, Tzu-Ming
    TERRESTRIAL ATMOSPHERIC AND OCEANIC SCIENCES, 2017, 28 (01): : 67 - 81
  • [30] Aging of the population and climate change: vulnerability and resilience from environment gerontology
    Menendez, Elisa Pozo
    CUADERNOS GEOGRAFICOS, 2021, 60 (02): : 315 - 317