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  • Water represents one of the biggest threats

  • posed by climate change.

  • That's because rising seas,

  • stronger storms,

  • and heavier rainfall

  • could massively increase flooding

  • by the end of the century.

  • It's already starting to happen

  • and it's very likely to get worse.

  • Catastrophic flooding in Western Europe

  • after violent storms

  • and powerful flood waters destroying entire towns.

  • It's easy to feel overwhelmed

  • looking at footage like this.

  • It seems like no one has any idea

  • what to do about this problem.

  • So, we're just going to see more and more damaging floods,

  • year after year.

  • But there is one place where it's possible to imagine

  • a very different future.

  • When you look at the city of Rotterdam,

  • the water is in our genes,

  • you could say.

  • We are already working for 1,000 years on this topic.

  • Keeping the water out

  • isn't a new challenge for the Netherlands.

  • It's a battle they've been fighting for centuries.

  • So, when the effects of climate change

  • started to crop up,

  • they were like, yeah, let's do this.

  • We're ready.

  • We traveled to Rotterdam

  • to find out how this city is getting ready for the future

  • and whether the ingenious stuff they've come up with

  • will ultimately be enough to save them

  • and hopefully the rest of us, too.

  • When you look at Holland or the Netherlands,

  • the name, the Netherlands,

  • already says that we are a low-lying country.

  • One-third of this country

  • is below sea level

  • and two thirds is vulnerable to flooding.

  • Back in the day,

  • the only things keeping the water at bay

  • were the dikes,

  • which are basically just raised mounds of earth.

  • Once every few decades,

  • the water would overwhelm the dikes

  • and cause catastrophic flooding

  • and that was just the way things were,

  • until one day in 1953,

  • all that suddenly changed.

  • In '53, it was a disaster.

  • A powerful storm struck the Southern Coast,

  • overwhelming dikes that had been badly damaged

  • in the second World War.

  • On the morning of February 1st, 1953,

  • Koos' father and brother

  • woke him up and told him what had happened.

  • In 1953, almost 2,000 people died

  • and that was the moment for us,

  • we said, this can never happen again.

  • This is time we started making our first barrier.

  • The flood galvanized the Dutch government

  • to build the world's most powerful flood defense system,

  • the Delta Works.

  • It was a series of modernized dams

  • and storm surge barriers

  • that took more than 40 years to complete.

  • And the final act of the Delta Works

  • is the barrier over here,

  • the Maeslant Barrier,

  • made to protect Rotterdam.

  • We're looking at the biggest movable

  • storm surge barrier in the world.

  • This is the same size as the Eiffel Tower.

  • So, you're looking at the Eiffel Tower laying on its side.

  • Most of the time,

  • the barrier stays open,

  • so ships can pass through.

  • When a storm comes along,

  • it snaps shut,

  • preventing the storm surge from traveling up river

  • and flooding Rotterdam.

  • The moveable design was radical

  • when it was completed in 1997

  • and it's inspired similar structures

  • in flood-prone cities around the world.

  • If you look at St. Petersburg in Russia,

  • a small version of this barrier has been made over there

  • and maybe in the future,

  • in front of Manhattan,

  • they're thinking about a way to protect that, also.

  • So, this was the first one

  • and now smaller versions

  • are coming all over the world.

  • But the barrier on its own

  • isn't enough to keep Rotterdam from flooding.

  • Talking about climate change,

  • we see an increase of more intensive rainfall.

  • We already are facing now and then,

  • small-scale flooding.

  • So, we need more places

  • where we can store this water.

  • Arnoud Molenaar

  • is also working to keep Rotterdam dry,

  • not by keeping the water out,

  • but by giving it a place to go.

  • This is the water square

  • and it is actually, you could say,

  • a symbol for our approach,

  • how to become climate adaptive.

  • So, under normal circumstances,

  • this square can be used as,

  • for example, a basketball field.

  • But on days like this,

  • it stores excess rainwater

  • and keeps it from flooding the streets.

  • So, it's a multifunctional solution.

  • We want to add quality to the urban space,

  • but in this way,

  • we are also adding water storage.

  • This is the first water square

  • that we have been developing,

  • but it's part of a bigger package of measures.

  • An interesting one close by here is

  • what we call the dakpark

  • or the rooftop park,

  • which is a kind of a long levy

  • of one kilometer

  • and on top of it, a huge green park.

  • It's storing excessive rain water,

  • because of the green roof.

  • Looking at the challenges related to climate change,

  • a lot of people think it's going to cost us

  • a lot of space and money

  • and we try to show that you also can use it

  • to work on a better city.

  • In some ways,

  • the Dutch are just as baffled as the rest of us

  • about climate change.

  • For one thing,

  • there's the question of what happens when sea levels rise

  • beyond a certain point?

  • The Maeslant Barrier was built to withstand

  • one meter of sea level rise

  • and a redesigned barrier

  • could potentially handle even more than that,

  • but there's only so much that even Dutch engineering can do.

  • Beyond two meters,

  • it's difficult.

  • We are working on new scenarios,

  • suppose it will be more than two meters,

  • four meters, five meters,

  • then what?

  • People ask me,

  • will you be moving on a certain

  • moment in time

  • to the higher grounds in the Netherlands?

  • I can't imagine that that will be a decision.

  • For survivors like Koos,

  • on the other hand,

  • it's not so hard to imagine the worst.

  • I think in 300 years,

  • Rotterdam will still be here,

  • but when the sea level will rise four or five meters,

  • we will have to find additional solutions.

  • Any idea what those would be?

  • Maybe on a larger scale,

  • invest in floating districts,

  • floating cities.

  • And that brings us to our final

  • and most radical solution.

  • My name is Koen Olthuis.

  • I'm a water architect.

  • For the last 15 years,

  • We've been building floating homes

  • in cities that face climate change

  • and sea level rise.

  • So, we have the floating home,

  • which has a floating foundation

  • and it can move up and down

  • with the fluctuation of the river,

  • but to keep it on one spot,

  • we have these kind of stilts.

  • The water will come up

  • and you will see that the house will move up, up, up, up

  • and if the water goes down,

  • it just guides it back.

  • 100 years ago,

  • you see cities start to grow up with high-rise buildings,

  • because they saw the space in the air.

  • Well, we see the city has to grow in the water.

  • It's not only about houses.

  • It's about floating apartment buildings,

  • floating roads,

  • floating parks,

  • all the kind of urban components you need

  • to make your city more waterproof.

  • Who knows,

  • maybe someday, we'll all live in floating houses

  • or maybe something entirely new will come along.

  • Preparing for climate change is a tough challenge,

  • but for the innovators of Rotterdam,

  • it's a process of adaptation that never ends.

  • It's not finished, our project.

  • It keeps on going.

  • It's an ongoing process.

  • I feel safe.

  • My children will feel safe

  • and my grandchildren will also feel safe,

  • but after that, you have to think again.

Water represents one of the biggest threats

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