University of Hawai?i at Manoa

04/22/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 04/22/2026 12:06

VNR: Waikīkī faces escalating threat of sewage-contaminated flooding

University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa

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Flooded streets in Waikiki. Credit: David Muther.

Compound flooding events cause contaminated backflow through drainage conduits. By Kyrstin Fornace.

Link to video and sound (details below): https://spaces.hightail.com/receive/S0RcZPjpVp

University of Hawai'i at Mānoa researchers revealed that Waikīkī is facing a fundamental shift in flood hazards as sea levels rise-transitioning from a flooding that is driven primarily by rainfall to events increasingly dominated by tidal processes. The team identified two key pathways that will become more significant with sea-level rise, both of which will increase public exposure to sewage-contaminated waters. The study was published inScientific Reports.

"Our findings make clear that current flood management strategies for Waikīkī are incomplete," said Kayla Yamamoto, climate modeling analyst at the Coastal Research Collaborative in the UH Mānoa School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology (SOEST). "Most planning focuses on surface damage and economic loss from storms, but largely ignores the contamination dimension. Our results show that contaminated flooding will become more frequent, more extensive, and eventually a daily occurrence rather than a storm-driven one. There are currently no effective management strategies in place to address this."

Simulating future scenarios

The team used an open-source, physics-based flood model to simulate how multiple flood sources interact in Waikīkī. The team used an advanced flood model that, unlike previous models, integrates all sources of flooding-rain, tides, underground water behavior, and storm drains-to provide a single, complete view of the hazard

"What we found is that during extreme rainfall like we've been experiencing, high tides and elevated water levels in the Ala Wai can combine to create conditions where contaminated water flows back into low-lying streets and sidewalks," said Shellie Habel, study co-author and coastal geologist with the Coastal Research Collaborative and Hawai'i Sea Grant. "As sea level rises, it will take less extreme rainfall and tides to cause similar flooding in the future."

The two key pathways they identified were: storm drain backflow, where polluted water from the Ala Wai Canal is forced into streets and public spaces in Waikīkī through drainage systems, and groundwater emergence, which brings sewage and other contaminants from aging and leaking sewage infrastructure to the surface.

The model simulations show that storm drain backflow is projected to occur even when there is no rainfall:

  • 1 foot of sea-level rise: Storm drain backflow occurs during extreme tides, even without rain.
  • 2 feet of sea-level rise: Storm drain backflow occurs during moderate daily tidal conditions.
  • 4 feet of sea-level rise: Groundwater emergence (bringing sewage to the surface) begins to occur without rain.

Researchers compared their model simulations against tide gauges, canal water level sensors, groundwater monitoring wells, and photographs of street-level flooding during three real recent storm events, including a major 50-year Kona storm in December 2021, a moderate storm in April 2023, and a five-year Kona storm in May 2024.

Implications for Waikīkī, beyond

The Ala Wai Canal is one of the most polluted waterways in Hawai'i, containing sewage, heavy metals and pathogens such as Vibrio and MRSA. Exposure to these waters is a documented risk, with MRSA infections linked to Hawaiʻi waters already contributing to an estimated 200 deaths per year in the state. Because Waikīkī is a primary economic engine where residents and visitors are in constant contact with coastal waters, the anticipated flooding represents a growing public health and environmental crisis.

Many coastal cities around the world rely on estuarine waterways to drain their stormwater, and face the same combination of aging infrastructure, rising seas and contaminated waters.

"Our modeling framework is transferable, and we hope this study serves as a wake-up call to modernize stormwater and wastewater infrastructure, integrate contamination risk into coastal flood planning, and build early warning systems before these thresholds are crossed," Yamamoto said.

VIDEO: B-roll (1 Minute, 10 seconds)

0:00-0:35 - Ala Wai

0:35-1:10 - Waikiki

SOUNDBITES:

Kayla Yamamoto, UH climate modeling analyst (16 seconds)
"The drainage infrastructure in Waikīkī is already failing, in one of the storms we looked at in our study, we found that about 90% of the drainage inlets were overwhelmed during the storm.And so this is not a future problem, it's a current problem, and it'll only get worse with sea level rise."

Yamamoto (11 seconds)
"What we found is that as sea levels rise, the storm drains in Waikīkī will increasingly become pathways for the contaminated water in the Ala Wai Canal to make its way into streets and public spaces in Waikīkī.

Shellie Habel, UH coastal geologist (12 seconds)
"We know that, all the waters, they're not clean by any means. They have things like staph, vibrio, etc. in them, and so any contact we have with them, it's a public safety hazard."

University of Hawai?i at Manoa published this content on April 22, 2026, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on April 22, 2026 at 18:06 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]