npj Ocean Sustainability (Nov 2024)

Uniting imagination and evidence by design to navigate climate survival in urbanizing deltas

  • Chris Zevenbergen,
  • Maurice G. Harteveld,
  • Pieter Bloemen,
  • Maarten van Ham,
  • Wim van den Doel,
  • Marcel H. Hertogh,
  • Fransje Hooimeijer,
  • Taneha Bacchin,
  • Eddy Moors,
  • Jeroen Rijke,
  • Ellen Tromp

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s44183-024-00094-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 1
pp. 1 – 5

Abstract

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Urbanizing river deltas are highly susceptible to sea level rise and extreme weather events such as floods and droughts. Water-related disasters are already happening more often due to climate change, rapid urbanization, unsustainable land use and aging infrastructure threatening a large fraction of human and natural environments in these low lying and sinking areas around the globe. As stress levels of climate change are accelerating, societal and physical transformations are essential for adapting our deltas to climate change. In the Netherlands, imagination and evidence by design in the form of a long-term spatial vision, played a pivotal role in the past century to set, share and accomplish a new direction to overcome flood disasters by altering the coastlines and riverbeds of the Rhine–Meuse–Scheldt delta. The unprecedented rainfall in July 2021 and the storm in December 2021 which hit Western Europe revealed the effectiveness of this new direction. We therefore plea for a prominent role of design in climate science and delta management to imagine, analyse and communicate future perspectives for climate adaptation in urbanizing deltas.