July-August 2007

Shoreline Protection Strategies

Temporary and permanent methods to save beachfront property

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By Roberta Baxter

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PEM
A Danish invention is making inroads into the US market for shoreline protection. The pressure equalizing modules (PEM) system was developed in Denmark and has been used at sites around the world, including Africa, Europe, and Malaysia. EcoShore International of Boca Raton, FL, is the exclusive licensee of PEM in the United States. According to Kenneth Christensen, president of EcoShore, the company is focused on Florida, California, New York, and New Jersey and plans eventual expansion into other states. EcoShore is presently in the process of obtaining permits for projects in the United States.

The PEM system starts from the principle that a wet beach is an eroding beach. When a beach is retaining water, an incoming wave cannot deposit its sand load because it can’t sink into the beach. The wave retains its load of sand as it withdraws and carries more from the beach with it because the particles don’t stick together.

By contrast, if the beach is drier, the swash infiltrates the sand and slows down, and deposition is increased. So, to mitigate beach erosion, the area needs to drain effectively after each high tide.

The PEM system accomplishes this drying-out task by allowing the beach to drain more effectively. The system consists of permeable tubes placed vertically into the beach in a grid pattern. The usual density is 70 to 100 tubes per mile of beach. The tubes are 2.5 inches in diameter and 6 feet long with a screen cap on the top, and they sit about a foot below beach level.

Different layers in the sand have different abilities to drain the water. Layers of coarser sand typically drain effectively. The PEM connects the different strata of sand, and water flows in the PEM tube where it can escape from the layer with the easiest flow route. Because the groundwater pressure equalizes, the beach becomes more permeable and less erosion prone.

A large test of the PEM system is occurring in Denmark. Along a 7-mile stretch of beach near Skodbjerge, erosion had been occurring at a rate above 1.5 million cubic yards a year. Control areas were laid out, alternating with areas of PEM installation. The plan is to observe the areas and measure beach erosion or restoration in each section.

After the first year, which was unusually calm, the PEM areas had increased in height by 44% while the control areas had been reduced by 3%.

From December 2006 until January 2007, four big storms hit the area and storm surges struck the beach. According to Christensen, the areas without the PEM had no beach left and the dunes were losing several meters. Beaches that had been nourished—that is, had sand added to them—suffered, too. In the PEM areas, the beach had not changed significantly and the dunes were still intact. “It was the ultimate test,” Christensen says, “and we’re very pleased with the result.”

With the PEM system, the beach is nourished with the same type of sand as the original beach, rather than with imported sand that may be of a different consistency or particle size. The PEMs are buried, so they are not obstacles on the beach, and the system can be easily removed if desired. And installation equipment is light and does not impact the beach environment. Each tube operates independently, so if one fails, the rest still work. No power is required for operation, and the system requires little maintenance.

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Costs for the PEM are about $200,000 for the first mile and $100,000 for each additional mile per year on a leasing basis. In some areas of Florida, costs of beach nourishment projects range up to $1 million per mile per year.

Whatever your needs for shoreline protection, you can find products to fill the bill. You might need temporary cofferdams to dewater an area while construction is happening or some type of permanent beach protection. With the multitude of products on the market today, you will find a system to protect our shores.

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