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Adaptation and mitigation measures to climate change in the Ebro Delta (LIFE EBRO-ADMICLIM)
Start date: Jun 2, 2014, End date: Jun 1, 2018 PROJECT  FINISHED 

Background The Ebro Delta in Catalonia is a wetland of international importance, and is considered one of the coastal systems most vulnerable to climate change in the European Union. The delta is undergoing a loss of wetlands and rice paddies because of coastal regression, caused by diminishing fluvial sediments, which are retained in the reservoirs of the basin. The coast is retreating by more than 10 metres per year in the mouth of the delta, where 150 hectares of wetland were lost between 1957 and 2000. The problem is accentuated by the decline in the elevation of the delta, because of the rise in sea level and subsidence. About half of the delta (15 000 ha) could be affected by this phenomenon during the 21st century. Objectives The LIFE EBRO-ADMICLIM project will implement a number of climate change adaptation and mitigation pilot actions in the Ebro Delta, an area vulnerable to sea level rise and subsidence. It will implement an integrated approach to the management of water, sediment and habitats (rice fields and wetlands), with the aims of optimising ground elevation (through inputs of inorganic sediment and organic matter), reducing coastal erosion, increasing the accumulation (sequestration) of carbon in the soil, reducing greenhouse gas emissions and improving water quality. The project's main tasks are: Production of a climate action plan for the Ebro Delta; To take climate adaptation measures in the delta. The aim is to restore the sediment flow by increasing sediment deposits in the delta. The sediments will come from two sources: o Sludge sediments from the Tarragona wastewater treatment plant. A pilot injection system will be developed; o Sediments from the Ebro water reservoirs, which will require an assessment of the transport capacity of the river and channels; and To take climate adaptation and mitigation measures for the rice fields and wetlands in order to: o Optimise carbon and nutrient sequestration; o Minimise greenhouse gas emissions from them; and o Increase the ground elevation. As a result of these initiatives, guidelines will be established for a programme of adaptation and mitigation measures with emphasis on the rice sector. It will be essential to design a strategy for voluntary reduction of greenhouse gas emissions that has the rice sector's support. Improved rates of carbon sequestration through a change in management practices (for example, more efficient water management) could represent a significant improvement that could be applied in other coastal wetlands and rice fields in the EU. Expected results: • Demonstration of the feasibility of reincorporating about 1 000 tonnes/year of Ebro River sediments currently retained in a water treatment plant; • Determination of the real capacity of the Ebro River to transport sediment, which is expected to change from 10 milligrammes/litre at present to about 100 mg/l if the flow of sediment through reservoirs is restored; • Optimisation of the performance of constructed wetlands, which are expected to achieve carbon sequestration rates of about 80 g per square metre per year, floor elevation rates of about 0.5 cm/year, nitrate reduction of 70% or more, and about a 30% reduction in contaminants; • Accurate assessment of greenhouse gas emissions from delta rice fields, which are expected to be in the order of 80 000 tonnes/year of CO2 equivalent. Reductions of 10-15% are expected to be achieved from changes in agricultural practices; • Accurate assessment of Ebro Delta subsidence, which has been estimated at about 2-3 mm/year, and identification of the areas (expected to be 30-40% of the total area) most vulnerable to rising relative sea levels; and • Development of a climate action plan for the Ebro Delta detailing concrete climate adaptation and mitigation measures.
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