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East Coast lost 10 meters of shoreline from Cyclone Gabrielle

Author
RNZ,
Publish Date
Wed, 7 Feb 2024, 2:47pm
At Mahanga Beach, the dunes separate the beach from the road, with houses on the opposite side. Photo / RNZ/Kate Green
At Mahanga Beach, the dunes separate the beach from the road, with houses on the opposite side. Photo / RNZ/Kate Green

East Coast lost 10 meters of shoreline from Cyclone Gabrielle

Author
RNZ,
Publish Date
Wed, 7 Feb 2024, 2:47pm

By Kate Green of

New research a year on from Cyclone Gabrielle shows parts of the East Coast鈥檚 shoreline are the most eroded they have been in decades.

Scientists at the University of Auckland have found parts of the coast have more than 10 metres due to erosion, and in the case of Mahanga Beach north of M膩hia, 20 metres was carved away.

The focus now is on whether they will get it back.

Associate professor Murray Ford said his team had been mapping the coast鈥檚 changes over the past 80 years, collecting historical aerial photos and comparing them with modern images.

In the cyclone鈥檚 aftermath, they immediately began acquiring more satellite images to compare the before and after.

Mahanga Beach was particularly affected.

Photo: RNZ/Kate Green
Photo: RNZ/Kate Green

鈥淚t鈥檚 a big long sandy beach, but most of the erosion seems to be focused at the northern end,鈥 Ford said.

鈥淭hey鈥檝e got a bit of a buffer between the beach and the road and houses, but that鈥檚 now down to 20 metres in places, whereas 18 months ago it was twice that width.鈥

The storm surge caused huge waves which carried sand off the beach and out to sea. Most of the erosion happened during a single high tide, over the space of hours.

鈥淲hat happens when a storm typically passes through is you get instantaneous erosion, and then it takes a long time for the beach to recover. Given we鈥檝e lost a lot of dune, it takes a long time for that sand to make its way back up onto the beach and build the dune back out as a healthy buffer.鈥

Would it build back up again? Ford said it was too soon to tell.

鈥淚t could take years to decades, if it follows what we see with similar events overseas.鈥

Ford said he hoped the research would inform councils鈥 mandatory hazard guidance for households, such as how close people could build to the shore and floor heights for new builds.

At Mahanga Beach, the dunes separate the beach from the road, with houses on the opposite side. Photo / RNZ/Kate Green
At Mahanga Beach, the dunes separate the beach from the road, with houses on the opposite side. Photo / RNZ/Kate Green

鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to quantify how much you can actually lose in a particular event so they can come up with better setback zones for coastal properties.鈥

Homes were not yet under threat at Mahanga Beach, Ford said.

鈥淭he amount of erosion we saw from this particular storm is not outside the bounds of what鈥檚 expected in that guidance, but as sea level rises, the waves can access the dune more frequently, and we鈥檇 expect to see an increase in the rates of erosion.鈥

In many cases, that was factored in to the councils鈥 advice, but there were also many communities built before the guidance was made.

As part of the research, the team set up a Facebook page where locals could submit their own pictures and got boots on the ground, doing drone surveys.

The extent of Gabrielle鈥檚 erosion made it a standout case, with considerable erosion from Northland down to Hawke鈥檚 Bay.

But advances in technology meant access to high-resolution satellite imagery was easier now than ever, Ford said.

鈥淐ommercially, they鈥檝e been operating these very high-resolution satellites for about the last 20 years, but it鈥檚 probably only been over the last four or five years that the cost has come down, and the accessibility got to the point where you can order an image on your phone... or you can actually pay a little bit more and task a satellite to be over your beach at a particular time and take an image.鈥

He said it cost academic buyers about $20 per square kilometre. The higher the resolution, the higher the cost, but it was a gamechanger for scientific research, he said.

- RNZ

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