RISING sea levels could cut North Wales main A55 road link, wash away railways, swamp holiday resorts and threaten businesses along the coast by the end of this century, according to leading ocean scientists.

That’s the warning from two Bangor University academics who have just published a major new work on the future of the world’s seas, 30 Second Oceans, as World Oceans Day approaches on June 8.

Oceanographers Dr Yueng Dern Lenn, from Chester, and Dr Mattias Green, from Glan Conwy, edited the book which has eminent contributors from around the world and covers 50 topics about the world’s oceans, their weather and climate and the challenges faced by the communities which live on their shores.

That includes the threat of rising sea levels, higher tides and more frequent storm surges to the North Wales coast including to the region’s key transport routes, the A55 and the North Wales Coast railway to Holyhead.

Bangor University; 30 Second Oceans by (L/R) Yueng-Djern Lenn and Mattias Green. Picture Mandy Jones .

Bangor University; 30 Second Oceans by (L/R) Yueng-Djern Lenn and Mattias Green. Picture Mandy Jones .

Dr Green, originally from Gothenburg, in Sweden, said: “Both those major infrastructure links are very close to the coast and already flood due to heavy rain and will be at risk as sea levels rise.

“A combination of heavy rain and a storm surge from the sea and we’ll be in trouble.

“The railway line would go first, between Bangor and Llandudno would be the first section affected, and there are places along the North Wales coast that will flood, particularly in North West Wales.

“There and along the Dee estuary there are thousands of static caravans and a major industrial area at Deeside which could be affected.

“We have already seen the Conwy Valley railway line, which runs four or five trains a day, closed several times in recent years and the track has been washed away by flooding.

“Add in a rise in sea level and it will be worse so it is inevitable that flood defences will have to be put in place at very high cost.

“In the UK we can probably afford that but elsewhere in the world, India, Bangladesh and the Maldives, for example, many low-lying countries simply can’t afford those kinds of defences.”

Coastal flooding around the world is set to rise by 50 per cent over the next 80 years, with millions of homes and businesses across the UK facing an uncertain future because of rising sea levels with northern Europe including the UK among the worst affected areas.

Bangor University; 30 Second Oceans by Yueng-Djern Lenn and Mattias Green. Picture Mandy Jones

Bangor University; 30 Second Oceans by Yueng-Djern Lenn and Mattias Green. Picture Mandy Jones

Dr Green said: “If we see that kind of sea level rise we could also see the disappearance of many of our sandy beaches.

“As scientists we can only advise. Politicians will have to take decisions on how best to protect the North Wales coast from flooding but prevention is always better than cure.”

Bangor University; 30 Second Oceans by Picture Mandy Jones

Bangor University; 30 Second Oceans by Picture Mandy Jones

Both Dr Lenn and Dr Green are from Bangor University’s acclaimed School of Ocean Sciences and they have enlisted a number of colleagues as well as academic experts from around the globe to contribute to 30 Second Oceans.

Dr Lenn, originally from Singapore and a graduate of the University of San Diego, in California, said: “We have already seen a community just south of Barmouth where the local council have decided they can’t defend it from the sea.

“It’s like the proverb about not buying a house built on sand because living by the sea is all well and good but the challenge for the UK is the effect of more extreme weather on where we live and where the sea starts.”