Saturday, August 25, 2018
Ever Get That Sinking Feeling?
Miami
and Miami Beach are getting used to rising tides and fierce rainstorms (not
just hurricanes) that constantly flood coastal streets. Yes, the ocean is in
fact rising. As ground water is pumped out for irrigation and human
consumption, we are seeing an increase everywhere in sinkholes, many of which
are big enough to swallow an entire car or even a house. We are also watching
as very heavy buildings, not anchored in bedrock (which may be economically too
deep to reach) slowly sinking down into the earth. Such is the case with the
58-story “Millennium Tower in San Francisco [which] is still sinking and
leaning…the luxury building at 301 Mission Street…
has sunk 17 inches and tilted 14 inches since it was completed in 2008.” Business Insider, July 24th.
Nasty.
But
when you combine all three of the above phenomena in, under and around a
seaside city of 10 million residents – Jakarta (Indonesia’s capital city) – you
just might get a megalopolis where the north side (aqua area in the BBC map to
the right) has sunk a whopping 97 inches in ten years, and much of the city
could easily slide entirely underwater by 2050. When Tokyo faced a similar
problem many years ago, it immediately put severe limits on the pumping out of
groundwater under the city. Jakarta is talking a similar game, but so far there
is very little in the way of tangible efforts to implement the necessary
water-removal restrictions. North Jakarta is sinking between half an inch to
six inches a year!
The
August 13th BBC.com reports: “[Jakarta]
sits on swampy land, the Java Sea lapping against it, and 13 rivers running
through it. So it shouldn't be a surprise that flooding is frequent in Jakarta
and, according to experts, it is getting worse. But it's not just about freak
floods, this massive city is literally disappearing into the ground…
“In
the district of Muara Baru, an entire office building lies abandoned. It once
housed a fishing company but the first-floor veranda is the only functional
part left… The submerged ground floor is full of stagnant floodwater. The land
around it is higher so the water has nowhere to go. Buildings that are so
deeply sunk are rarely abandoned like this, because most of the time the owners
will try to fix, rebuild and find short-term remedies for the issue. But what
they can't do is stop the soil sucking this part of the city down…
“North
Jakarta has historically been a port city and even today it houses one of
Indonesia's busiest sea ports, Tanjung Priok. Its strategic location where the
Ciliwung river flows into the Java Sea was one of the reasons why Dutch
colonists chose to make it their bustling hub in the 17th Century… Today 1.8
million people live in the municipality, a curious mixture of fading port
businesses, poor coastal communities and a substantial population of wealthy
Chinese Indonesians…
“But
the impact on the small homes right by the sea is magnified. Residents who once
had a sea view now see only a dull grey dyke, built and rebuilt in a valiant
attempt to keep seawater out… ‘Every year the tide gets about 5cm higher [about
2 inches],’ Mahardi, a fisherman, said.
“None
of this has deterred the property developers. More and more luxury apartments
dot the North Jakarta skyline regardless of the risks. The head of the advisory
council for Indonesia's Association of Housing Development, Eddy Ganefo, says
he has urged the government to halt further development here [since the weight
of these buildings just adds to the problem]. But, he says, ‘so long as we can
sell apartments, development will continue.’…
“The
rest of Jakarta is also sinking, albeit at a slower rate. In West Jakarta, the
ground is sinking by as much as 15cm annually [6 inches], by 10cm [4 inches]
annually in the east, 2cm [0.8 inches] in Central Jakarta and just 1cm in South
Jakarta.
“Coastal cities across the world are affected because of
rising sea levels caused by climate change.
Increased sea levels occur because of thermal expansion - the water expanding
because of extra heat - and the melting of polar ice. The speed at which
Jakarta is sinking is alarming experts…
“It
may seem surprising but there are few complaints from Jakartans because for
residents here the subsidence is just one among a myriad of infrastructure
challenges they have to deal with daily.
“And
that is part of the story of why this is happening… The dramatic rate at which
Jakarta is sinking is partly down to the excessive extraction of groundwater
for use as drinking water, for bathing and other everyday purposes by city
dwellers. Piped water isn't reliable or available in most areas so people have
no choice but to resort to pumping water from the aquifers deep underground.
“But
when groundwater is pumped out, the land above it sinks as if it is sitting on
a deflating balloon - and this leads to land subsidence…The situation is
exacerbated by lax regulation allowing just about anyone, from individual
homeowners to massive shopping mall operators, to carry out their own
groundwater extractions.
“‘Everyone
has a right, from residents to industries, to use groundwater so long as this
is regulated,’ says Heri Andreas. The problem is that they take more than what
is allowed… People say they have no choice when the authorities are unable to
meet their water needs and experts confirm that water management authorities
can only meet 40% of Jakarta's demand for water…
“[Add
a sea wall demand the locals, but] three Dutch non-profit groups released a
report in 2017 which cast doubt on whether the sea wall and artificial islands
could solve Jakarta's subsidence problem.
“Jan
Jaap Brinkman, a hydrologist with the Dutch water research institute Deltares,
argues it can only ever be an interim measure. He says it will only buy Jakarta
an extra 20-30 years to stop the long-term subsidence.
“‘There
is only one solution and everybody knows the solution,’ he says… That would be
to halt all groundwater extraction and solely rely on other sources of water,
such as rain or river water or piped water from man-made reservoirs. He says
Jakarta must do this by 2050 to avoid major subsidence.” While it may be
fascinating to watch, it is equally sad. Between global climate change and too
many people sucking down too many resources, the earth is showing us her
limits. For those unfortunate enough to be on the edge of the overlap of
Malthusian population growth and global warming, the consequences become very
personal… and even more severe.
I’m Peter Dekom, and frankly,
scientific facts don’t really care whether you believe them or not; they just
are and will do what the laws of physics programmed them to do.
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