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Reducing Coastal Risk on the East and Gulf Coasts

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Hurricane- and coastal-storm-related losses have increased substantially during the past century, largely due to increases in population and development in the most susceptible coastal areas.

Climate change poses additional threats to coastal communities from sea level rise and possible increases in strength of the largest hurricanes.

Several large cities in the United States have extensive assets at risk to coastal storms, along with countless smaller cities and developed areas.

The devastation from Superstorm Sandy has heightened the nation's awareness of these vulnerabilities.

What can we do to better prepare for and respond to the increasing risks of loss?Reducing Coastal Risk on the East and Gulf Coasts reviews the coastal risk-reduction strategies and levels of protection that have been used along the United States East and Gulf Coasts to reduce the impacts of coastal flooding associated with storm surges.

This report evaluates their effectiveness in terms of economic return, protection of life safety, and minimization of environmental effects.

According to this report, the vast majority of the funding for coastal risk-related issues is provided only after a disaster occurs.

This report calls for the development of a national vision for coastal risk management that includes a long-term view, regional solutions, and recognition of the full array of economic, social, environmental, and life-safety benefits that come from risk reduction efforts.

To support this vision, Reducing Coastal Risk states that a national coastal risk assessment is needed to identify those areas with the greatest risks that are high priorities for risk reduction efforts.

The report discusses the implications of expanding the extent and levels of coastal storm surge protection in terms of operation and maintenance costs and the availability of resources. Reducing Coastal Risk recommends that benefit-cost analysis, constrained by acceptable risk criteria and other important environmental and social factors, be used as a framework for evaluating national investments in coastal risk reduction.

The recommendations of this report will assist engineers, planners and policy makers at national, regional, state, and local levels to move from a nation that is primarily reactive to coastal disasters to one that invests wisely in coastal risk reduction and builds resilience among coastal communities. Table of ContentsFront MatterSummary1 Introduction2 Institutional Landscape for Coastal Risk Management3 Performance of Coastal Risk Reduction Strategies4 Principles for Guiding the Nation's Future Investments in CoastalRisk Reduction5 A Vision for Coastal Risk ReductionReferencesAppendix A: Major U.S.

Coastal Storms Since 1900Appendix B: USACE Coastal Storm Damage Reduction ProjectsAppendix C: Biographical Sketches of Committee Members

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Product Details
National Academies Press
0309305861 / 9780309305860
Paperback / softback
10/12/2014
United States
208 pages
152 x 229 mm
Professional & Vocational Learn More