Climate actions
A groyne is a shore protection structure built perpendicular to the shoreline of the coast (or river), over the beach and into the shoreface (the area between the nearshore region and the inner continental shelf), to reduce longshore drift and trap sediments. A groyne field or system is a series of groynes acting together to protect a beach. Rock is often used as construction material, but wooden groynes, steel groynes, rubble-mound and sand-filled bag groynes, or groynes made of concrete elements can also be found. Rock groynes are generally preferred as they are more durable and absorb more wave energy due to their permeable nature. Timber or gabions may be used for temporary structures. Possible adverse effects on adjacent beaches by causing downdrift erosion.
Install groynes
Objective
Reduce longshore drift and trap sediments.
Description
Expected results
Protect certain parts of the coast and maintain upper beach stability.
Result indicators
Area of protected coast [m²]
Involved actors
Local communities and landowners, government at different levels.
Expected timeline for action
Best practices
Criticalities
Scope of the action
Type of proposed actions
Sector of action
Climate impacts
Implementation scale