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UN Climate Change Conference In Mexico Highlights Cancun's Disappearing Beaches

MARK STEVENSON   11/30/10 06:25 PM ET   AP

Mexico Climate Conference

CANCUN, Mexico — Cancun's eroding white sand beaches are providing a note of urgency to the climate talks being held just south of this seaside resort famed for its postcard-perfect vistas.

Rising sea levels and a series of unusually powerful hurricanes have aggravated the folly of building a tourist destination atop shifting sand dunes on a narrow peninsula. After the big storms hit, the bad ideas were laid bare: Much of Cancun's glittering hotel strip is now without a beach.

Hotels built too tall, too heavy and too close to the shore, as well as beaches stripped of native vegetation to make them more tourist-friendly, have contributed to the massive erosion.

"It was the chronicle of a disaster foretold," said Exequiel Ezcurra, the former head of Mexico's environmental agency. "Everybody knew this was going to happen. This had been predicted for 40 years."

Cancun's beaches largely disappeared after Category 4 Hurricane Wilma hit in 2005, leaving waves lapping against hotel foundations or against rocks.

Four category 4 and 5 hurricanes have hit Mexico in the past decade, the highest rate in 40 years and equal to all those in the preceding three decades, according to Mexico's National Meteorological Service. Many scientists blame such extreme weather patterns on climate change.

The coastline erosion was worsened by a rise in sea level, which has grown at a rate of about 2.2 millimeters a year.

"It doesn't sound like much, but ... in an area as low as that sandbar, it doesn't help, especially when the sandbar doesn't have the properties to compensate for sea level," Ezcurra said.

In a major restoration project last year, millions of cubic yards (meters) of sand were dredged from the sandy bottom of the Caribbean and pumped ashore in Cancun. The project created a seven-mile stretch of beach some 40 to 70 yards (meters) wide, at a cost of about $70 million.

It is already washing away. Waves have carved a waist-high shelf into the beach and Assistant Tourism Secretary Hector de la Cruz acknowledges that 6 percent to 8 percent of the new sand has been swept away – even without any major storms.

It was the second time such an undertaking had been tried; a $19 million beach restoration effort in 2006 also washed away, finished off by a Category 5 hurricane, Dean, that hit further down the coast in 2007.

Officials hope each disaster will be the last and the sand will somehow stick.

"The erosion was really caused by Hurricane Wilma stalling over the area, and we just have to hope we don't get another one like that," De la Cruz said.

Tourists and local residents are skeptical.

Fernando Garcia, a 47-year-old opal dealer from Bilbao, Spain, strode up the steep Delfines beach after a swim in the turquoise waters and gazed back to the shelf the waves have carved in the sand.

"In a year or two, another hurricane will come and the same thing will happen all over again," he said. "This is an absurd waste of money."

In a financial sense, however, it still works. Cancun remains the biggest money-earner of all of Mexico's tourist destinations, bringing in about $3 billion per year – about a quarter of Mexico's tourism income.

"I wouldn't talk about Cancun as an error," said De la Cruz. "I think Cancun is one of the most successful tourist developments not just in Mexico, but in the entire Caribbean."

And those with enough money to stay here continue to enjoy it – perhaps even more, as the climate undergoes increasingly large swings.

Margaret Young, a retired teacher from Winnipeg, Canada, came to Cancun as unusually heavy storms lashed her hometown.

"We feel climate change," Young said. "We get storms in the summer that we never used to get."

And the foot of snow that fell in the Winnipeg area in late November was also unusual. "We used to get some snow, but not that severe," she said.

Told that the beach she and her friends were enjoying was largely artificial, Young said: "How would you know from looking at it? It's fabulous, one of the nicest beaches ever."

All the debate might be academic if it weren't for the fact that pumping huge amounts of sand affects both the ocean floor ecosystems where the sand was removed, and the coral reefs that lie offshore.

That's because sand from the sea bottom contains fine sediments that wash away with the tide from the newly restored beaches and onto the reefs, blocking out sunlight and causing them to secrete mucuous-like substances, said Roberto Iglesias, a biologist with the Ocean Sciences Institute of Mexico's National Autonomous University.

Experiments are still under way to judge the exact effects, but there is evidence that sea grasses have suffered higher die-offs from previous beach restoration efforts, said Iglesias, who works on coral reefs and coastal environments in Puerto Morelos, just outside Cancun, where the two-week U.N. climate change conference is being held.

Experts note that dredging sandy sea bottoms affects the populations that live there, such as conches, octopus and sea cucumbers.

Iglesias recalled one local official saying the resort had to choose restoring the beaches over protecting coral reefs "because the majority of Cancun's inhabitants make their living off the beaches, not the reefs."

De la Cruz, whose agency oversaw the sand-dredging project, blames more frequent, violent storms for the erosion and maintains "all the beaches in the Caribbean are vulnerable to these natural events."

But the former head of Mexico's environmental agency, Exequiel Ezcurra, says Cancun was built with fatal flaws.

Tall hotels force winds downward onto the beach, creating eddies that encourage erosion. Waves that once might have rolled harmlessly right over the dunes now smack into solid hotel foundations, and rebound – filled with sand – back out to sea. And the very weight of big hotels might be pressing the unstable sand peninsula downward.

Fittingly for the scene of what some see as an environmental crime, the coastal resort has increasingly been marked by police tape. In July 2009, marines cordoned off the beach in front of a Cancun hotel that had built an illegal breakwater to hoard sand.

The armed guards treated the stretch of beach as a stolen property case: While such cement jetties often benefit the builder, they rob properties down-current of their natural flow of sand.

Garcia says the powder sand beaches – unblemished by the shrubs, vines and dune grasses that might hold it together – are "something made up, intended as a promotional picture."

But he concedes their effectiveness. "This is something to be used to sell the idea of the resort to people who live in cold climates," he said.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST GREEN

CANCUN, Mexico — Cancun's eroding white sand beaches are providing a note of urgency to the climate talks being held just south of this seaside resort famed for its postcard-perfect vistas. Ris...
CANCUN, Mexico — Cancun's eroding white sand beaches are providing a note of urgency to the climate talks being held just south of this seaside resort famed for its postcard-perfect vistas. Ris...
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10:57 AM on 12/11/2010
Headline: "Tourists crushed by giant bottles..."
01:38 PM on 12/01/2010
Please take a few minutes to read my public comment to the Securities Exchange Commission regarding my personal experience with insider trading, alternative energy and the water fuel cell:

http://sec.gov/comments/df-title-ix/short-sale-disclosure/shortsaledisclosure-11.htm

Be sure to check out the attached files #1 & #2 at the bottom of the comment page. You should also learn about the present state of the technology by reviewing this video clip:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v_7U9erWId4

Please share this your staff, writers, reporters, friends, neighbors and associates.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dardedar
Not here to play patty cake...
08:23 PM on 12/01/2010
Excerpt from your link: "the technologies described may be of value for the production and use of hydrogen lending tremendous credibility to the water as a fuel controversy and debate."

You can't get net energy from water. Period. You can extract hydrogen from water but you always use more energy (usually far more) in the process than you can recover from the hydrogen. No exceptions to this rule. The physics involved was understood over 150 years ago. See:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laws_of_thermodynamics

It's a common misunderstanding that hydrogen could be a net source of energy with which we could replace our fossil fuels. Not so. You have to make hydrogen (and compress it, and store it all difficult and energy intensive) and you always lose energy in the process, no free lunch, no exceptions. Once hydrogen is "made," compressed and stored it can be a very efficient fuel via fuel cell technology (also very old tech) but there are lots of other problems with that too. See:

http://fayfreethinkers.com/forums/viewtopic.php?p=14345#p14345
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12:14 PM on 12/01/2010
shifting sand..

is by far the definitive criteria proving that the climate does indeed change!

oh that and the fourth consecutive cold nasty winter in the uk..
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01:38 PM on 12/01/2010
Funny, the climate modelers suggested that global warming would cause the UK and northern Europe to become colder due to an interruption of warm waters traveling north in the Atlantic.
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Publicola
Facts are stubborn things
01:43 PM on 12/01/2010
Funny, you don't seem to understand the difference between the words "would" and "could".
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Publicola
Facts are stubborn things
01:47 PM on 12/01/2010
shifting fumes..

is a climate science denier straw man machine!

oh and what's up with this year yet again being one of warmest on record..

-------------------------------

speaking of your science denial fumes..

when are you going to stop denying that downward infrared radiation exists?

you'll never understand even basic climate science..

until you understand that basic science fact you know!
Sandmanj
Tread gently. Mother nature is pregnant.
10:18 AM on 12/01/2010
I'd like to see some good satellite photos of Cancun taken every 3 months for the past 50 years.
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09:56 AM on 12/01/2010
The phrase "climate change" is a redundancy.

Also, the water level of the Caribbean would drop significantly if there were no constant, prevailing tradewinds pushing water toward it. The sand would not move if there were no tides and currents.
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Dardedar
Not here to play patty cake...
10:53 AM on 12/01/2010
And if froggies had wings, they wouldn't bump their bottoms so hard when they hop down the road.
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11:51 AM on 12/01/2010
Funny how frogs don't "bump their bottoms" at all when hopping. But I know you really didn't have anything meaningful to add.

So, you are saying that it is mythical how sand is taken and deposited across shoreline? So, by that logic, oceanography and meteorology are voodoo sciences?
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Publicola
Facts are stubborn things
03:06 PM on 12/01/2010
ekg: "The phrase "climate change" is a redundancy­."

Would you prefer "global warming"?
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03:19 PM on 12/01/2010
Only if you can tell me what the proper temperature for the Earth is, at least then we can have a reference point. Be sure to include all available historical data (since we have only been industrialized for a tiny, minuscule blip on Earth's timeline)when you finally get back to me with that number.
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Publicola
Facts are stubborn things
03:40 PM on 12/01/2010
ekg: "Only if you can tell me what the proper temperatur­e for the Earth is"

The "proper temperature" of the Earth for what?
09:47 AM on 12/01/2010
Space Mirrors! Monty Burns' plan is in full motion.

Since the beginning of time, man has yearned to destroy the sun. I shall do the next best thing: block it out.
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LetsGoSteve
09:25 AM on 12/01/2010
Sea walls destroy beaches not man caused climate change. Look at the facts and become a denier.

http://www.minnesotansforglobalwarming.com/m4gw/videos/
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01:41 PM on 12/01/2010
A combination of seawalls and increased storm events makes it even faster.
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Publicola
Facts are stubborn things
01:51 PM on 12/01/2010
LetsGoSteve: "Look at the facts and become a denier."

I love science denier irony - especially from a science denier like Steve, who in addition to denyin climate science also denies evolution science.

You do deny that the scientific evidence for evolution -- that is, the theory of natural selection which maintains that humans evolved from an ape-like ancestor -- is overwhelmi­­ng, right Steve?
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Dardedar
Not here to play patty cake...
09:11 PM on 12/01/2010
Hey Publicola, did you know that the fellow who did the Oregon Petition is a creationist? Read all about it here:

http://fayfreethinkers.com/forums/viewtopic.php?p=7504#p7504
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08:44 AM on 12/01/2010
The only way to curb erosion is if you do like the West and Southeast Coasts of Florida: destroy all the wetlands and reconstruct them in convenient man-made canals where they can conveniently dump their fertilizers and road runoff
08:39 AM on 12/01/2010
Cancun is largely a man made sand bar,, IT IS SUPPOSED to disappear!
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01:46 PM on 12/01/2010
It was not a man made sand bar. It was a sandbar which had permanent structures places in the middle of its migration routes shoreward and seaward. My wifes family visited the place for generations and before the development and until that time it was a huge lagoon.
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08:37 AM on 12/01/2010
Ridiculous. If you don't want sand to move you might as well just turn it into concrete. More huffypuffy knee-jerking preying on the ignorance of most Americans, who do not live in coastal areas.
Fact: Beaches move. They always have and they always will. We renourish our East Coast beaches due to the natural migration of barrier islands to the South. We are only delaying what nature will eventually do. To think it is the result of climate change is idiotic, well unless climate change caused them to overdevelop on a geologically unstable area......

Wonder what the carbon footprint of this meeting is.....
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LetsGoSteve
09:28 AM on 12/01/2010
Another fellow denier. This global warming hysteria is killing the economic engine of the USA.

http://www.minnesotansforglobalwarming.com/m4gw/videos/
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Publicola
Facts are stubborn things
01:54 PM on 12/01/2010
LetsGoSteve: "Another fellow denier."

Hey ekg are you, like LetsGoSteve, an evolution denier too?

And if not, why the double-standard with respect to climate science?

Steve may be a denier, but at least he's consistent with his science denial - he denies both climate and evolution science.
11:40 AM on 12/01/2010
NCPA 11/30/10-A high-ranking member of the U.N.'s Panel on Climate Change admitted the group's primary goal is the redistribution of wealth and not environmental protection or saving Earth, says Investor's Business Daily (IBD).

Ottmar Edenhofer, a German economist and cochair of the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's (IPCC) Working Group III on Mitigation of Climate Change, told the Neue Zurcher Zeitung last week: "The climate summit in Cancun at the end of the month is not a climate conference, but one of the largest economic conferences since the Second World War."
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Blufftonian
FORWARD! he cried from the rear
02:30 PM on 12/01/2010
And a great party! Because reduced consumption is for the little people.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q83CQ_7CGCg&feature=player_embedded
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Dardedar
Not here to play patty cake...
09:27 PM on 12/01/2010
Ottmar's context that "bresponsible" either forgot (or never read):

***
Edenhofer: Basically it’s a big mistake to discuss climate policy separately from the major themes of globalization. The climate summit in Cancun at the end of the month is not a climate conference, but one of the largest economic conferences since the Second World War. Why? Because we have 11,000 gigatons of carbon in the coal reserves in the soil under our feet—and we must emit only 400 gigatons in the atmosphere if we want to keep the 2-degree target. 11 000 to 400—there is no getting around the fact that most of the fossil reserves must remain in the soil.

NZZ: De facto, this means an expropriation of the countries with natural resources. This leads to a very different development from that which has been triggered by development policy.

Edenhofer: First of all, developed countries have basically expropriated the atmosphere of the world community. But one must say clearly that we redistribute de facto the world’s wealth by climate policy. Obviously, the owners of coal and oil will not be enthusiastic about this. One has to free oneself from the illusion that international climate policy is environmental policy. This has almost nothing to do with environmental policy anymore, with problems such as deforestation or the ozone hole."

http://blog.heritage.org/2010/11/19/climate-talks-or-wealth-redistribution-talks/

Deniers, always looking for a silver bullet in one comment that might slay all of climate science. Pitiful.
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mjcc1987
Too many freaks, not enough circuses
07:57 AM on 12/01/2010
Sorry, this is socialist propaganda. This is not happening as God said so. The oceans are not rising, the land is shrinking. It happens when your 6,000 years old. Wait till the earth needs a colonoscopy bag
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Teresa Rump
07:51 AM on 12/01/2010
silly humans, build their resorts on shifting sands and complain about the inevitable. the earth is in constant flux; glaciers advancing and receding, grand teutonic plates roiling the continents, oceans of air flowing in majestic currents, sometimes hot, sometimes cold, species arising and falling.

silly humans, spewing geysers of fossil fuels to 'conference' about climate change.
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08:44 AM on 12/01/2010
too obvious..

the others will never get it!
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dragonmaster
08:58 AM on 12/01/2010
Ah yes the anti science- ditto heads at it again- acting as a tag time with the 'Last Sane American'

I do hope I see the day when you are proven wrong- both of you- and guess what? That may be sooner then we think!
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jcarterla
There ain't no shame in my game!
07:43 AM on 12/01/2010
Doesn't everyone know that the earth will be in the process of exploding before America will act. It is Krypton all over again. I am building my rocket.
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07:21 AM on 12/01/2010
Eek, do this mean I can stop saving for my vacation in Cancun, Mexico? (jeez, what a bummer, I was only a short about 2 or 3 years away)
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Raccoon1
These are the times that try men's souls........
09:25 AM on 12/01/2010
Maybe the beach will come to you. Fanned.
10:06 AM on 12/01/2010
LOL
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Tully Mars 63
07:20 AM on 12/01/2010
In this case I think you're seeing a combination of poor planing and the effects of climate change speeding up the damage. The seas levels are rising, a couple mil. a year. That's global warming. It's possible the increase in the number and strength hurricanes are due to GW. But this would have happened eventually with or without GW. I live on a beach north and west of Cancun, closer to the gulf. The beach in front of my house hasn't really change much in the last 10 yrs. I been coming here for years (lived here perm. for the past 3 yrs.) but there are no large hotels here to create the problems mentioned in the article.