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CRESO project officially launched to strengthen coastal risk management in the Mediterranean

The CRESO project was officially launched on 21 November with a presentation conference held in Genoa, in the multipurpose hall of the Church of San Salvatore. All project partners and representatives of the involved territorial authorities attended the event. Funded by the Interreg Italy–France Maritime Programme, CRESO brings together the University of Genoa, ISPRA, CEREMA for the PACA Region, SIGMA for Liguria, MEDSEA for Sardinia and AUE for Corsica, with the shared goal of developing updated knowledge and innovative tools to understand and manage coastal risk linked to climate change in the programme’s most exposed areas. 

The structure of the project is organised around three complementary lines of work. The first focuses on the modelling of extreme marine-coastal events: high-resolution simulations will be carried out to analyse storm surges, extreme waves and sea level rise, with particular attention to flooding processes and to the role  (see MEDSEA Campaign A marine Forest to save the planet).of Posidonia oceanica banquettes in protecting beaches from erosion The second line concerns the assessment of vulnerability and risk, using methodologies tailored to the different territorial contexts, ranging from highly urbanised coastlines to areas characterised by high natural value. The third involves translating scientific results into operational tools for territorial management, developed together with the competent authorities to ensure their effective application at the local scale. 

 
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Manuela Puddu, CRESO project lead for MEDSEA, at the kickoff event held in Genoa on 21 November.

MEDSEA, which has long been engaged in coastal-risk analysis (see the Coastal Risk Index), will play a cross-cutting role throughout the project and will coordinate the partners involved in developing management protocols across the different territories.

In Sardinia, the organisation will lead the studies for the pilot site identified within the Metropolitan City of Cagliari, working on selected coastal stretches together with local authorities. The analyses will focus on the areas most exposed to climate impacts and will be developed through a participatory process built directly on the territory and carried out in dialogue with local communities and economic actors.

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