Many of Cork county’s coastal roads “are under increasing pressure due to their proximity to dynamic shorelines and the intensifying effects of climate change”.
That is according to a senior Cork County Council official who said that the local authority is taking steps to protect the roads as global warming intensifies.
CLIMATE & SUSTAINABILITY HUB
Mr Barrett said that council engineers are continuing to assess the condition and vulnerability of coastal roads and this work “will inform both strategic infrastructure planning and development management processes”.
Ms Linehan Foley and Fianna Fáil councillor Patrick Mulcahy said the council needs to install more groynes and rock armour in vulnerable coastal areas.
“I’m very concerned and worried about what’s happening,” said Ms Linehan Foley.
Fine Gael councillor Michael Hegarty said a landowner in the Ballymacoda area was recently refused planning permission to install rock armour to protect his property from sea erosion.
Mr Hegarty said he could not understand this, especially as the land is in a strategic location and if it is breached by the sea there is a possibility that the village of Ballymacoda could get flooded.