Protect our shores

25 Big Local Actions

Inspiration read

Nature based solutions to protect communities from coastal flooding

Stronger Shores

Stronger Shores is a collaborative project in the northeast of England, involving South Tyneside Council, universities and nature trusts. The team has turned to the hidden habitats below the waves – seagrass meadows, kelp forests and oyster reefs – for solutions that can make big stretches of the British coastline and communities stronger in the face of flooding, coastal erosion and climate change. Marine experts are learning firsthand how these habitats are reducing erosion, stabilising shorelines and supporting local wildlife, in addition to capturing more carbon. Replicable in other coastal areas, they are creating a flood and coastal resilience practitioner’s toolkit for marine habitat restoration.

Our Future Coast

In another big collaboration, Our Future Coast is developing a set of 14 natural ‘buffer strips’ to increase the coastal resilience of vulnerable hot spots in the northwest of England. Creating and protecting natural coastal buffer zones, with their rich vegetation, provides multiple benefits (beyond reducing coastal erosion and flood risk). These include improved biodiversity, water quality and carbon capture. For example, Hest Bank outside Lancaster is one of these buffer strips, where local people and volunteers have been installing wooden and plant structures to speed up the regeneration of the protective saltmarsh.

Making Space For Sand

Making Space For Sand is an ambitious coastal project looking at sandy beach dune systems to protect our shores, across 40 different locations in Cornwall. Sand dunes are important because they can absorb wave energy and they are natural sea defences, but this form of shoreline protection is only possible and effective where there is enough store of sand. Without space along our coastal fringes for these sand dunes to roll back and build up, the rates of erosion can increase dramatically and compound the risks faced by communities located behind them. Surveying and tracking all 40 systems, the cross-sector team is developing a resilience plan and toolkit that will help in making sufficient space for natural sand dune defences along the Cornish coast and elsewhere.

  • Inspiration listen

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    What would inspire you to do something bigger for climate and nature? In this, the first episode of the Carbon Copy Podcast series, Do Something Bigger, we introduce our year-long campaign: 25…

What if?

What if we could better protect our shores? Which of these things could we save from the impacts of coastal erosion before the end of this century? 

Save 21 entire villages.

✓ True

Save 1 million properties at risk.  

Even bigger!

Save 1,000 miles of major roads.

✓ True

Getting ready for transplanting seagrass into underwater restoration areas.
Transplanting seagrass. Credit: Seawilding
Induced mussel-grown droppers.
Induced mussel-grown droppers
Seaweed harvesting at Carnarwig
Car-y-Mor seaweed harvesting

With special thanks
to our partners
: