New research device now in place to measure storm surge in Northumberland Strait - Action News
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Nova Scotia

New research device now in place to measure storm surge in Northumberland Strait

The Municipality of Cumberland has placed a new monitoring device on a wharf along the Northumberland Strait to measure tides and storm surges.

Municipality of Cumberland and NSCC partnering in monitoring project

Two men lower a large metal rod into the water from a wharf.
Research scientist Tim Webster, left, helps install a tidal measuring device at the wharf in Northport, N.S., along the Northumberland Strait. (Submitted by Municipality of Cumberland)

The Municipality of Cumberland is hoping topredict which sections of itscoastline are mostvulnerable to damage by installinga new monitoring device to measuretides and storm surges on a wharf along the Northumberland Strait.

"The municipality will take the results from it and use it in its own land-use planning and emergency management planning," said Steve Ferguson, the senior adviser on climate change and special projects for the municipality.

"That will make sure that we have the most accurate and most useful information going forward for decades really."

The municipality and Nova Scotia Community College are working together on the project. Until now it's been difficult to measure the local impact of rising seas and storm surges because the closest monitoring stations are near Shediac,N.B.,and in PictouCounty, N.S.

Research scientistTim Webster and his team from NSCC were in Northport recently to place a gauge on the side of the wharf in the harbour. They're hoping the tide gauge will provideinformation thatcan be used inplanningdevelopments along the coastline. It could also help determine areas where no development should be considered at all.

A metal device is mounted partially below sea level on the side of a wharf
The new tidal measuring device was installed at the wharf in Northport two weeks ago. (Submitted by Tim Webster)

"Basically as the water level comes up and there is more water over the sensor, then we can calculate how much water is up above it," saidWebster. "It records the water level and temperature every 15 minutes, 24 hours a day."

Monitoring storm surges

The new sensor is battery operated, unlike similar machines used throughout the Maritimes that have been tied into the electrical grid and could not record during big storms whenpower was knocked out.

"The best way to get accurate information of storm surges or high-water events is through actual observation and empirical measurement," said Webster. "It will take time to build up the record of these measurements but we can also observe relative sea level rise through time with these gauges."

Residents along the Northumberland Shore in Cumberland County have always dealt withtherisk of damage from storm surges combined with high tides along areas of vulnerable coastline. With climate change bringing sea levels higher and more frequent storms, including hurricanes, the data gathered by the new device could become critical in how municipalities across the province plan to deal with it.

Research Nova Scotia providedover $165,000to support the project.