Climate Risk Overview of Coastal Hotspots
As part of the company’s goal to make coastlines more resilient and work on nature based solutions, we created a tool which gives an overview of flood vulnerable areas and protected areas.
Using mostly open geodata and open source frontend libraries, the GIS and Data lab team at Van Oord worked on getting together and analysing key parameters such as population, low-lying land and expected sea level rise to anticipate the hazard of flooding for global coastlines and societies.
The climate risk overview tool is open to use at: https://climaterisk.data.vanoord.com
The tool is meant to encourage collaboration and discussion between different organizations on climate solutions for coastal hotspots and offer different views of areas near the coast based on selected criteria and applied filters.
We’d like to talk about the process and some interesting GIS problems we came across during this project:
Several iterations to break up the world’s coastlines into equal polygon areas of 10 km2 were tried. With this as a base layer to make aggregated calculations of people exposed to flooding, it became tricky to capture the Small Island Developing States with the medium resolution data available. How did this get solved?
Another aspect we had to think about was how to load the results of over 60,000 points in a web map application, without a full-fledged backend, which performs well with respect to user experience – the user should be able to see instant results while applying various filters on the layer attributes.
Our stack – Vue, Quasar, dc, PostGIS, Postgrest, Python