Mambo42
Guru
- Joined
- Oct 26, 2021
- Messages
- 973
- Vessel Name
- Endless Summer
- Vessel Make
- 1979 Defever 49
All water protection etc is always paid for by the government, that never is a private enterprise. We have a department of waterworks and they are responsible for everything that has to do with protection from the water (amongst other tasks).Et cetera...
Did the Netherlands build those barriers without causing individual home and business owners to somehow move out of the way? How was it all financed?
-Chris
And yes, quite a few home owners needed to be bought out by the government. Their location was deemed to be dangerous or required as an overflow area. A market conformal price was set and the owners moved, but to be honest, would you want to live in a place that you know has no protection against the water ? I think I would pass.
So, ultimately the tax payer pays, but it not in such a way that taxes get raised to finance it. They have a yearly budget and the government can shift money from one department into this apartment if it would be urgent. I guess it was one of the reasons why it was spread out over 30 years. Some of the defenses had to be invented, since we had the interests of fishermen, flora and fauna activists and our neighbor Belgium. We could not simply close off one of the 'sea arms, since the port of Antwerpen lies behind that. So along that stretch the dikes were heightened and strengthened.
Now with the rising of the sea level the Netherlands has to start planning to re-strengthen the dikes, create more overflow areas, perhaps even come up with new ideas to keep the water out.
This video gives a great insight in what was build in movable water protection. Obviously you cannot close off the port of Rotterdam, so that had to be something that will only close in case of an emergency. Same is for the other major movable barriers, they are only allowed to close under certain circumstances. It is a very expensive defense, especially if they don't get used at all, but just in case it goes wrong out on the North Sea (just like it did in 1953), we now have full protection and the whole country can sleep quietly.
The video has English subtitles, so even though they speak Dutch, the subtitles are pretty good.
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