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Backup Documents 10/10/2017 Item # 5DDrs. Peter Sheng & Michael Savarese University of Florida / Florida Gulf Coast University Report on a Cooperative Agreement with NOAA NCCOS started on June 1, 2017: An Overview of the Project Preparing for Sustainable & Economically Healthy Urban and Natural Systems in the Context of Increasing Future Inundation Risk Board of Collier County Commissioners Presentation October 10, 2017 NOAA-NCCOS Project: Introduction •Project title “A Web-based Interactive Decision-support Tool for Adaptation of Coastal Urban and Natural Ecosystems (ACUNE) in Southwest Florida. •A 3-year project funded at $995,487. •RESTORE Act, Deepwater Horizon settlement monies. Not subject to budget cut. •Not your typical science award! Scientific tools for decision makers. •The proposal’s success . . . Our robust science and strong collaboration with urban and natural resource planners and elected officials. •Our thanks to the County Commission, the City Councils of Naples and Marco Island, Managers of State & Federal Lands, and the Collier League of Women Voters. •Our community’s approach should be 3 phased: (1) use the best available science to generate the possible scenarios of environmental effects; (2) employ the best actionable science to develop a viable plan(s) for adaptation; and (3) eventually engineer a plan in anticipation. •Our NOAA project will focus on the first phase and provide the best science. •That plan itself should be adaptable as time progresses and actual effects are realized. •Introducing Peter Sheng . . . A Web-Based Interactive Decision-Support Tool for Adaptation of Coastal Urban and Natural Ecosystems (ACUNE) in Southwest Florida Mangroves in Southwest Florida Study Domain Storm Surge (1-28ft) + Tide (0-6ft) + Wave Setup (0-5ft) + Precipitation (0-4.5ft) + SLR ( ~1ft, 2ft, 6ft) for (2030, 2060, 2100) ======> Higher Water Level (in water) + Inundation Level (on land) •Water Level in water (above MSL or MLLW) is not the same as Flood Elevation (above NAVD88) and Inundation Level (above ground) which vary spatially. •FEMA maps are probabilistic maps based on historical storms, but do not include future storms & SLR 1% annual exceedance probability (AEP) inundation map 100-year inundation map 1-in-100 chance inundation map It is possible to have two 1% AEP floods within one month! National Academies Committees on Improving Flood Map Accuracy & The New Orleans Hurricane Protection System •1% AEP Base Flood Elevation (BFE) Map (obtained with coastal model and historical storm data) plus zoning map are used for collecting flood insurance for NFIP •1% AEP flood elevation, which is frequently exceeded during storms, does not ensure flood resilience •Dutch government uses 1000-10000 year (0.01-0.1%) map •BFE significantly influenced by the land use features •FEMA maps do not include the effects of more intense storms and SLR in 21st Century •SLR is prescribed at the open boundary, but cannot be applied everywhere Flood Elevation 6 Storm tides along NY/NJ Bight Coast during Sandy in 2012 3.44 m Simulation by CH3D-SWAN (Zou and Sheng 2017) A Robust Coastal Model ACMS (CH3D-SWAN) has been used to simulate Andrew, Isabel, Charley, Ivan, Katrina, Wilma, Ike, Sandy, Irma, ………and results are validated with extensive water level data and High Water Marks Rapid Forecasting System –Hurricane Irma Advisory 38 & 46 Collier County Got Lucky! Surge > 11 ft Inundation > 9 ft Realtime Forecasting: 30 min Rapid Forecasting: 3 min IRMA Best Track RAPID FORECAST SYSTEM (RFS) Model Validation With HWM’s HWM’s are not fully QA/QC’ed USGS HWM stations RFS is validated with USGS HWM’s NOAA (2012): We have very high confidence (>9 in 10 chance) that global mean sea level will rise at least 0.2 meters (.75 ft) and no more than 2.0 meters (6.6 ft) by 2100. In 2017, NOAA (2017): 6.6 ft (99.7%) and 8.4 ft (99.9%). Add local Relative Sea Level (RSL). NOAA (2012) High: ( 1ft, 2.5ft, 6.6ft) for (2030, 2060, 2100) Kopp et al. (2014) 99th percentile:( 1ft, 2.4ft, 5.94ft) for (2030, 2060, 2100) 50th percentile: (0.5ft, 1.5ft, 3ft) including RSL at Naples RCP=Representative Concentration Pathway=Emission Scenario: RCP2.6 (Best Case), 4.5 (Medium), 8.5 (Worst Case) IPCC AR5 ~ 80 percentile 99.9 percentile Sweet, W.V., R.E., Kopp, C.P. Weaver, J. Obeysekera, R.M. Horton, E.R. Thieler, C. Zervas, 2017: Global and Regional Sea Level Rise Scenarios for the U.S. NOAA Technical Report NOS CO-OPS-083. NOAA •Sea Level Rise Scenario values are used at the open ocean boundary of dynamic coastal models. •Flood risk to be determined by coastal model simulations considering future storms and SLR. •SLR values are evolving as we learn more about the processes. •2100 is 73 years away, much higher than life span of most infrastructures. •We’ve got time to decide. •We will select the appropriate SLR values for 2030, 2060, 2100 based on sensitivity study and together with the end users who will decide their risk tolerance for specific infrastructures. This is not a 1% annual chance flood! SLR cannot determine flood event. Our new NOAA- NCCOS project in a nutshell Best Available Actionable Science Project Team Principal Investigator Peter Sheng Project & Science Lead Research Professor University of Florida Co-Principal Investigator Michael Savarese Coordination Lead Professor Florida Gulf Coast University Team Member Christine Angelini Marsh/Mangrove Survey Assistant Professor University of Florida Team Member Mike Barry Mangrove/Marsh Ecology Ecologist Institute for Regional Conservation Team Member Justin Davis Hydrodynamic Survey Research Assistant Scientist University of Florida Project Team Team Member Felix Jose Beach Processes Assistant Professor Florida Gulf Coast University Team Member Ken Krauss Mangrove/Marsh Ecology Research Ecologist U.S. Geological Survey Team Member David Letson Economic Impact Professor RSMAS, University of Miami Team Member Vladimir Paramygin Coastal Modeling Research Assistant Scientist University of Florida Team Member Karen Thorne Mangrove/Marsh Ecology Research Ecologist U.S. Geological Survey Name Agency Title Kevin Godsea Ten Thousand Islands National Wildlife Refuge Team Leader / Refuge Manager Mark Danaher Supervisory Biologist Keith Laakkonen Rookery Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve Reserve Manager Brita Jessen Research Coordinator Jeff Carter Stewardship Coordinator Patrick O’Donnell Fisheries Biologist Jessica McIntosh Coastal Training Program Coordinator Lisa Koehler South Florida Water Management District Lead Administrator Akin Owosina Bureau Chief Hydrology & Hydraulics Rhonda Watkins Collier County Senior Environmental Specialist Danette Kinaszczuk Pollution Control Manager Stephanie Molloy City of Naples Natural Resource Manager Chadd Chustz City of Marco Island Environmental Specialist Steve Houseknecht Fakahatchee State Park Interim Park Manager Kirby Wilson Collier-Seminole State Pk Park Manager Zach Lozano Delnor-Wiggins State Pk Park Manager Bob Sobczak Big Cypress Natl Preserve Hydrologist Steven Gornak FL Fish & Wildlife Conservation Commission Biological Administrator Sara Ayers-Rigsby FL Public Archaeological Network Director Southeast & Southwest Regions Rachel Kangas Public Archaeology Coordinator SW Region Margo Schwadron National Park Service Archaeologist Austin Bell Marco Island Historical Society Curator of Collections Kathy Worley Conservancy of SWFL Director Environmental Science Natural Resource Management Team Urban Resilience & Planning Team Name Agency Title Linda Penniman City of Naples Team Leader / Vice Mayor Naples Bill Moss City Manager Charlette Roman City of Marco Island City Council Member Larry Honig City Council Member Howard Reed City Council Member Penny Taylor Collier County County Commissioner / Board Chair Donna Fiala County Commissioner Leo Ochs County Manager Nick Casalanguida Deputy County Manager Jerry Kurtz Stormwater Management Trinity Scott Transportation Planning Manager Andy Miller Transportation Engineering Howard Critchfield Building Review & Permitting Caroline Cilek Floodplain Management David Weeks Growth Management Manager Eric Fey Public Utilities Rick Zyvoloski Emergency Management Amy Patterson Director Capital Project Planning Anne McLaughlin Director, Collier MPO Gary McAlpin Manager Coastal Zone Management Nader Ardalan Ardalan Associates Urban Architect & Designer Nicole Johnson Conservancy of SFWL Director Growth Mgmt & Planning Project Collaboration & Communication •End users were engaged in the proposal development. •The products will be developed and shared over 3-year period. •At year’s beginning . . . •Host a series of meetings with team members to provide concerns & recommendations for those year’s products. •This input will help define the product’s foci and appearance for greatest usefulness. •At year’s end . . . •Host workshops to present products, train on their use, and to collaboratively interpret. •During year 2, County pursues a companion planning effort through an RFP process. 1. What tool are we developing? •An integrated web-based tool (ACUNE) to enable end users to develop coastal resiliency plan for flood protection, estuarine preservation, and mangrove restoration •The tool will include various products: •Tropical cyclones for future climate (2030, 2060, 2100) •Sea Level Rise scenarios (2030, 2060, 2100) •Probabilistic coastal inundation maps for current and future climate (2030, 2060, 2100) •Beach impact maps for 2030, 2060, 2100 •Mangrove distribution maps in 2030, 2060, 2100 •Probabilistic inundation maps and economic impact maps with various adaptation (e.g., mangrove restoration) plans Developing Probabilistic Coastal Inundation Maps •Current Climate •Analyze statistical properties of historical storms for a coastal region •Develop a Storm Ensemble (SE) which can represent all possible storms •Generate Coastal Inundation Maps for the Storm Ensemble •Develop Probabilistic Coastal Inundation Maps •Future Climate •Develop a Storm Ensemble (SE) for 2030, 2060, 2100 •Generate Coastal Inundation Maps for the Future Storm Ensembles •Develop Probabilistic Coastal Inundation Maps for 2030, 2060, 2100 Example of Coastal Flood Risk Study for SW FL Condon and Sheng (Natural Hazards, 2012) •Study Domain •Gulf of Mexico, Caribbean Sea and West of Atlantic •SW Florida •Collier County Grid Resolution ~ 30-500 m Surge Atlas with Cat-5 Hurricane Simulated with CH3D-SWAN Modeling System (Condon and Sheng, Natural Hazards, 2012) No Sea Level Rise With 1.5 m Sea Level Rise Cannot do planning based on a single storm! Joint Probability Method (JPM) for Storm Ensemble (SE) •FEMA approved method for generating storm ensemble for current climate. •Develops the probability distribution function (pdf) of the five storm parameters: Intensity, Size, Forward Speed, Direction, and Landfall Location. •Requires >20,000 storms to represent all possible storms. Computationally very intensive. •Condon and Sheng (2012, Natural Hazards) Used JPM-Optimal Sampling to simulate inundation during ~150 “optimal” (representative) storms which represent all possible storms (>20,000). Efficient. 1% AEP Surge varies significantly along the coast 1% AEP surge levels at Naples for 2100 climate scenario = 4.74 m (RCP8.5 without SLR) (simulated by CH3D) , but the 100-yr surge varies significantly along the coast We will use CH3D-SWAN to simulate future flooding throughout the Collier County under an ensemble of future storms and SLR values Climate Scenario Period AMO Phase Sea Level Rise (m) Storms Current Climate (CC)1982-2009 -0.0 60 Future, RCP 4.5 Early (2020-2040)Negative 0.0 28 Future, RCP 4.5 Early (2020-2040)Positive 0.0 29 Future, RCP 4.5 Early (2020-2040)Negative 0.3 28 Future, RCP 4.5 Early (2020-2040)Positive 0.3 29 Future, RCP 4.5 Late (2080-2100)Negative 0.0 47 Future, RCP 4.5 Late (2080-2100)Positive 0.0 64 Future, RCP 4.5 Late (2080-2100)Negative 1.0 47 Future, RCP 4.5 Late (2080-2100)Positive 1.0 64 Future, RCP 8.5 Late (2080-2100)Positive 1.0 66 Future, RCP 8.5 Late (2080-2100)Positive 2.0 66 Current and Future Climate & SLR Scenarios (Sheng et al. 2017) •Condon and Sheng (2012) used results of Knutson et al. (2010) -slightly more intense but less frequent future storms. •Sheng et al. (2017) used results of LaRow et al. (2014) –more intense and frequent future storms (Knutson et al. 2015). Based on prediction by global climate/atmospheric models and downscaled by regional WRF model Example SW Florida 1% AEP Inundation Maps Current Climate RCP4.5, 2030, 0.3m SLR RCP8.5, 2100, 2m SLR •Slight increase in Inundation Volume/Area/Heights by 2030. •Significant increase in Inundation Volume/Area/Heights by 2100. Contour plots of % of inundation due to SLR RCP8.5 2100 50 Years 500 Years 1mSLR 2mSLR Even in 2100, storms and SLR must both be considered! Q: Can Storm Effects be Neglected by 2100? Bathtub Model Dynamic Model 2 m SLR + 4.74 m Surge 2 m SLR + RCP8.5 2100 Storms (100-year surge at Naples) Unrealistically high! Water Levels at Select Locations •Flood risk at any specific location can be predicted •Flood risk varies spatially with location •We have NOT finished the flood risk study. These are preliminary results Assessing the role of mangrove forest in reducing coastal inundation(Sheng and Zou, 2017, Hydrobiologia) Vegetation removed Green infrastructure can be used to buffer storm surge, wave, and inundation in Collier County! Mangroves prevented massive flooding in Miami Dade County during Hurricane Andrew! With vegetation 29 >11 ft Everglades City Sampling sites for future storms Approximate Vegetation Type Map (2007)Beach Study Areas 2. What do we need to do to produce the tool? •Predict coastal inundation in future climate (SLR, more intense storms, etc.) •Quantify the role of mangroves in buffering wave, surge, and flooding •Predict coastal inundation in Collier and Naples in future climate, considering various mangrove restoration plans and climate scenarios •Predict future mangrove migration in upland direction •Predict salinity changes in Rookery Bay and Naples Bay •Quantify the economic impact of future inundation & mangroves’ effects 3.How are we doing it? •Use new model domain •Simulate the role mangroves and marshes played during Hurricane Charley and Wilma •Measure mangroves and marshes distribution and vertical structure •Monitor wave, surge, and inundation during future extreme events •Predict future storms •Develop predictive model of upland migration of mangroves •Develop probabilistic coastal inundation maps for Collier and Naples, considering SLR and mangrove restoration options •Develop economic impact maps •Provide training to stakeholders on the use of the tool and products Milestone Chart Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 End-user &researcher coordination &outreach 2a Detailed mapping of vegetation distribution/structure 2b Field monitoring of episodic events in vegetation area Site selection,sensor development/procurement and assembly Episodic events #1,#2 and #3 #1 #2 #3 2c Validation of vegetation-resolving surge-wave model 3a 100-yr &500-yr coastal inundation maps under current climate 3b Produce mid &late 21st century coastal inundation maps 4 Predict mid &late 21st century salinity distribution in estuaries 5 Develop vulnerability maps of beaches and barrier islands Extract beach morphology,compile LiDAR data,Sallenger method Grid development:Marco,Keewaydin islands,Naples,Vanderbilt beaches Model application for simulating morphological evolution Product development 6 Predict future distributions of marsh/mangrove habitats – Setting up baseline model,model calibration,model validation 7a Develop future coastal inundation maps corresponding to various mangrove restoration plans 7b Economic maps for various restoration plans 8a Develop ACUNE prototype by integrating all the products 8b Incremental updates of ACUNE based on user feedback Semi-annual reports Annual project meeting Technical monitor meeting FGCU subaward execution UM subaward execution Questions? Sea Level Rise Report & Recommendations for Collier County, Fla. Dr. Benjamin Strauss -Climate Central -October 10, 2017 Source: http://climate.nasa.gov/vital-signs/sea-level/Source: NOAA Source: http://climate.nasa.gov/vital-signs/sea-level/ Source: NASA, https://sealevel.nasa.gov/understanding-sea-level/key-indicators/global-mean-sea-level Source: NASA, https://sealevel.nasa.gov/understanding-sea-level/key-indicators/global-mean-sea-level Source: RealClimate.org Source: NASA Muir and Riggs Glaciers, Alaska USGS 1941 1950 2004 0 1 2 3 4 5 1990 2000 2010 2020 2030 2040 2050 2060 2070 2080 2090 2100Sea level rise (feet)2015 FMP Kopp - Low Kopp - Central Kopp - High Main recommended sea level projections Basis for main recommendation (Compact also uses RCP 8.5) NOAA global scenarios https://www.nasa.gov/jpl/news/antarctic-ice-sheet-20140512/ Main recommended sea level projections Projection 2030 (ft)2060 (ft)2100 (ft)2100 (m) 2015 Collier County FMP 0.3 0.9 2.5 0.7 Kopp –Low 0.4 0.9 1.5 0.5 Kopp –Central 0.6 1.4 2.8 0.8 Kopp –High 0.9 2.0 4.4 1.3 Kopp –99th percentile 1.0 2.4 5.7 1.7 Extreme n/a n/a 10.4 3.2