Climate actions
A breakwater is a coastal structure (usually a rock and rubble mound structure) projecting into the sea that shelters vessels from waves and currents, prevents siltation of a navigation channel, protects a shore area or prevents thermal mixing (e.g. cooling water intakes). A breakwater typically comprises various stone layers and is typically armoured with large armour stone or concrete armour units (an exception is vertical (caisson) breakwaters). A breakwater can be built at the shoreline or offshore (detached or reef breakwater). Possible adverse effects on adjacent beaches by causing downdrift erosion.
Install breakwaters
Objective
Protect the coast from coastal erosion and ensure safety during the docking and mooring phases of boats in ports.
Description
Expected results
Protection of coastal areas and enhance workability and provide thus higher efficiency in loading and unloading vessels.
Result indicators
Length of breakwaters [m].
Involved actors
Local communities, 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