We found a match
Your institution may have rights to this item. Sign in to continue.
- Title
A Holistic Framework for Evaluating Adaptation Approaches to Coastal Hazards and Sea Level Rise: A Case Study from Imperial Beach, California.
- Authors
Revell, David; King, Phil; Giliam, Jeff; Calil, Juliano; Jenkins, Sarah; Helmer, Chris; Nakagawa, Jim; Snyder, Alex; Ellis, Joe; Jamieson, Matt; Zou, Qingping; Reeve, Dominic E.
- Abstract
Sea level rise increases community risks from erosion, wave flooding, and tides. Current management typically protects existing development and infrastructure with coastal armoring. These practices ignore long-term impacts to public trust coastal recreation and natural ecosystems. This adaptation framework models physical responses to the public beach and private upland for each adaptation strategy over time, linking physical changes in widths to damages, economic costs, and benefits from beach recreation and nature using low-lying Imperial Beach, California, as a case study. Available coastal hazard models identified community vulnerabilities, and local risk communication engagement prioritized five adaptation approaches—armoring, nourishment, living shorelines, groins, and managed retreat. This framework innovates using replacement cost as a proxy for ecosystem services normally not valued and examines a managed retreat policy approach using a public buyout and rent-back option. Specific methods and economic values used in the analysis need more research and innovation, but the framework provides a scalable methodology to guide coastal adaptation planning everywhere. Case study results suggest that coastal armoring provides the least public benefits over time. Living shoreline approaches show greater public benefits, while managed retreat, implemented sooner, provides the best long-term adaptation strategy to protect community identity and public trust resources.
- Subjects
IMPERIAL Beach (Calif.); SEA level; BEACHES; SHORELINES; GROUP identity; COASTAL ecosystem health; COASTAL zone management; UPLANDS; HAZARDS
- Publication
Water (20734441), 2021, Vol 13, Issue 9, p1324
- ISSN
2073-4441
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.3390/w13091324