In what amounts to a sea change for a country that is essentially built on reclaimed land, the Netherlands is quietly surrendering some of its hard-won former seabed, river bottoms and swamp back to the waters.
The government has begun acquiring thousands of acres of agricultural land and industrial strips along major waterways that would be used as flood plain in periods of high water. Dikes guarding these stretches of river will be lowered, repositioned, or, in some cases, removed.
In dry times, the flats could be used for agriculture, or even for envisioned “floatable” factories and housing.
But when the rivers swell from winter rains, the land would serve as a natural buffer zone, thus softening the fury of the water by allowing it to spread, lessening the risk of a disastrous breaching of the dikes.
After centuries of protecting itself from sea storms and river floods, solely with “hard” barriers, such as dikes and dams, the Netherlands is now endeavoring to make itself “climate-proof.” The plan involves greener, more resilient techniques to cope with the accelerated rise of rivers and sea levels that many climatologists expect to come with global warming.
I alluded to this solution during Hurricane Katrina. Now, more details are reaching print in English as the program proceeds. The Army Corps of Engineers knows all about this. I wonder if they intend to consider this alternative to more of the same old, same old?
What about the farmers living on that land?
I have a friend in the Army Corps, parts of New Orleans will not be rebuilt, those areas will be used in a similar fashion. I recall the government buying Mississippi flood areas after a series of floods for the same purpose.
I’ve always wondered why they haven’t come up with a floatable house design for folks who live in wet areas. When waters rise, you just shut off some valves and unbolt the place from the foundation, make sure the anchor is in place, and inflate the big pontoons. Then sit back on your porch and do some fishing and wave at passing boats.
(And I’m sure there would be amusing stories about people who were partying too much and forgot to pay attention as to where the receding water was setting them back down…)
Maybe someone from China or Cambodia or someplace will think it up and make millions.