Abstract

Economic and population growth have led to an unprecedented increase in the value at risk in coastal zones over the last century. To avoid excessive future losses, particularly in the light of projected climate change impacts, coastal zone managers have various instruments at their disposal. These primarily concern land-use planning (establishing buffer zones) and engineering solutions (beach nourishment and coastal protection). In this paper, we focus on risk mitigation through the implementation of buffer zones (setback lines). Foregoing land-use opportunities in coastal regions and protecting coasts is costly, but so is damage caused by inundation and storm erosion. Defining appropriate setback lines for land-use planning purposes is a balancing act. It is however unclear what level of protection is facilitated by current approaches for defining setback lines, and whether this is, at least from an economic perspective, sufficient. In this paper, we present an economic model to determine which setback lines would be optimal from an economic perspective. The results provide a useful reference point in the political debate about the acceptability of risk in coastal zones. The main conclusions are (i) that it is useful to define setback lines on the basis of their exceedance probabilities, (ii) that the exceedance probability of an economically efficient setback line will typically be in the order of magnitude of 1/100 per year, (iii) that it is important to distinguish between situations in which morphological conditions are stationary and non-stationary, and (iv) that long-term uncertainties (e.g. due to climate change) influence the exceedance probability of efficient setback lines but only to a limited extent.

Highlights

  • The establishment of coastal setback lines is an effective coastal zone management strategy representing the 'retreat' and/or 'accommodate' philosophies

  • Implement a buffer zone up to the point where the probability of damage exceeds the rate of return on investment minus the cost of capital, e.g. 0,025 yr-1

  • 11 Conclusions and recommendations Foregoing land-use opportunities in coastal regions is costly, but so is damage caused by erosion

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Summary

Introduction

The establishment of coastal setback lines is an effective coastal zone management strategy representing the 'retreat' and/or 'accommodate' philosophies. The historical practice of defining setback lines based on a single deterministic estimate is proving inadequate with the emergence of risk management style coastal planning frameworks which require probabilistic estimates of coastal erosion. This way of thinking is only emerging in coastal management circles (Vrijling et al, 2002, Jongejan and Ransinghe, 2009, Van Dongeren et al, 2008). Risk based coastal management requires that the economic value and lifetime of property/infrastructure developments be taken into account in arriving at optimal management strategies These are two important aspects that are rarely taken into account in establishing coastal setback lines. This approach has been used in the Netherlands since the 1950s to inform decisions about flood protections (Fig. 2; Van Dantzig, 1956)

The economics of defining setback lines
Top view Properties
Stationary morphological conditions
Findings
11 Conclusions and recommendations
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