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Year 1 Published Deliverables

We annually upload work package deliverables, so they are publicly available. You can find all published deliverables in the designated work package page. They are in blue to easier to view which have been uploaded and which will be uploaded in the future. Just click to view or download!

For convenience, we are also uploading all of this years deliverables here:

*This post was updated on 9 March 2023 to include:

D1.3 Rich user narratives and D2.4 Report on functional specifications of the platform

CoCliCo is One Year Old!

CoCliCo marks the anniversary with a consortium wide workshop.

We hosted our first in-person workshop in Orleans, where we brought together representatives from each of the partner organisations. We are already one year into the project and have completed a lot, from defining key user stories to creating the fast-track platform. So now was a crucial time to come together and align our efforts to make the most impact in the upcoming two years. 

Here is a summary of our three days and where the CoCliCo project is currently at.

Day 1. Updates & Fast-Track Version.

We started with a consortium-wide alignment by Gonéri Le Cozannet from BRGM on the purpose and aims of the project. The main objective of CoCliCo services is to improve decision-making on coastal risk management and adaptation across Europe and the UK.

A big bulk of day 1 focused on updates and exploration of work packages 1-6. We have 8 work packages that form the foundations of the CoCliCo project.

Work package division outlining what the WP is about and which partner organisations are involved.

WP1 ensures the project meets the needs of its specific target users. These users are from the following sectors: policy, cities and towns, and private coastal infrastructure. A fruitful discussion built upon the research conducted by Sayers & Partners. Each of the partners will take these learnings and integrate them into the specific context of their work package. 

WP2 is responsible for developing the platform. The first step was to create the fast-track version. This was presented live to the whole consortium for the first time by Etiënne Kras and Floris Calkoen from Deltares. Thanks to WP2 leaders Deltares for developing it, and to Aristotle University of Thessaloniki for supporting its development. 

The fast-track version includes:

Our partners in WP3-6 are working on the science and data that will populate the platform. These include projections across sea level, coastal hazards (erosion and flood), exposure and vulnerability (to people, infrastructure etc), risk and adaptation, and how to model these. We explored these WPs more deeply on day two. 

Day 2. Data, Data, & More Data.

We dived into the specifics of what datasets will be used and how we can ensure that the data used is FAIR (that it is Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable). The following diagram show the different elements of the CoCliCo platform development and how they interact to be FAIR.

Arjen Luijendijk from Deltares led the session on Integrated scenarios. We discussed how to prioritise our users, scenarios and datasets so as to provide the most comprehensive but viable outputs that are needed to address the pressing issues in coastal risk assessment and adaptation.

Remi Thiéblemont from BRGM led The Data Working Group review of our available data to ensure fluent interaction between datasets and the platform. 

CoCliCo is multi-dimensional, covering typologies from physical, biological, social, and governance to platform design. Professor Robert Nicholls from University East Anglia led The Coastal Typology Working Group led the discussion to work on consistency and synergies between the typologies, work packages and final CoCliCo service. He also shared insights from the WCRP Sea Level 2022 Conference that he co-organised.

Similarly, Bart Van den Hurk from Deltares presented Knowledge Hub Sea Level Rise, a joint endeavour by JPI Climate and JPI Oceans held in Venice. It brought together key knowledge on the state and future of our coasts. We’ll feed the conclusions from both conferences into the development of CoCliCo. 

Five early career scientists presented their research and how it will contribute to CoCliCo datasets and modeling. 

  • Vanessa Völz, GCF. Coastal Adaptation Decision Analysis: Sea Level Rise Learning Scenarios​.
  • Maialen Irazoqui, Mercator Ocean. Sea level projection variability. 
  • Hedda Bonatz, Kiel University. Analysis of coastal population distribution in Europe​.
  • Joël De Plaen, VU Amsterdam. Exposure and vulnerability of critical infrastructure.
  • Floris Calkoen, Deltares. Data-driven coastal change modeling at the continental scale​.

Day 3. All The Rest.

To round up our workshop, day three covered the following five topics. 

  • Assessing and representing uncertainties
  • Integrated scenarios 
  • Policy brief
  • WP7 Communication, dissemination and exploitation
  • Platforms workbench demo 

1) Assessing and representing uncertainties 

As is with all scientific modelling, no platform claims to know and account for everything – if they do, be wary! How will we represent this uncertainty on our platform? What assumptions are we making, and what variables do we not know or can’t account for?

In each of our work packages, the uncertainty is different. The analysis assumptions will vary depending on the data and the factors involved. We need to consider this at an early stage, in terms of the hazards and risks, the users and the platform to recognise and address uncertainty where we can and communicate it clearly.

A good approach to assess this further is through case studies. By choosing case studies we have advanced knowledge of, we can assess the assumptions and uncertainties of the platform through a clear reference. 

2) Integrated Scenarios 

We walked through each data set to tease out the range of scenarios and their key indicators, the key drivers affecting that indicator, the limitations for generating data and details of the output. From here, we will integrate these to create scenarios in the platform.

3) Policy brief

Gonéri Le Cozannet introduced the policy brief that we are collaborating on with Protect and SCORE, two other EU-funded projects on coastal resilience. It will address the questions “When will a 2m rise in sea levels occur?” and “How might we adapt?”

Stay tuned for the key messages being presented at COP27.

4) WP7 Communication, dissemination and exploitation

We talked through the communication, dissemination and exploitation activities thus far and plans for the future, like collaborating with all the partners to build user stories. We also discussed the long-term vision; how CoCliCo will continue to add value after the project ends. 

5) Platforms workbench demo

We closed the day with a demo of the platform’s workbench: Mapping coastal building footprints using STAC API and how we will enable external parties to use the data and code to expand the work of CoCliCo Services and make it Open Source.

With that, we parted ways! All in all, we had three very productive days and are stepping into year two aligned and motivated.