4.7 Article

Operationalising coastal resilience to flood and erosion hazard: A demonstration for England

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 783, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.146880

Keywords

Adaptation pathways; Policy; Management; Resilient communities; Socio-economic resource allocation

Funding

  1. Strategic Priorities Fund, UK Climate Resilience Programme through a UK Research & Innovation award [NE/S016651/1]
  2. Coastal Group Network
  3. National trust
  4. RSPB
  5. Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust
  6. National Flood Forum
  7. Natural England
  8. Network Rail

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This paper explores the measurement and application of resilience to coastal flood and erosion hazard, using England as a case study. The authors define resilience pragmatically and develop a set of composite indicators and a prototype Coastal Resilience Model. They suggest that achieving the goal of refocusing national policy towards enhancing coastal resilience would require firm commitment from government and consensus methodology.
Resilience is widely seen as an important attribute of coastal systems and, as a concept, is increasingly prominent in policy documents. However, there are conflicting ideas on what constitutes resilience and its operationalisation as an overarching principle of coastal management remains limited. In this paper, we show how resilience to coastal flood and erosion hazard could be measured and applied within policy processes, using England as a case study. We define resilience pragmatically, integrating what is presently a disparate set of policy objectives for coastal areas. Our definition uses the concepts of resistance, recovery and adaptation, to consider how the economic, social and environmental dimensions of coastal systems respond to change. We develop a set of composite indicators for each dimension, grounded empirically with reference to national geospatial datasets. A prototype Coastal Resilience Model (CRM) has been developed, which combines the dimensions and generates a quantitative resilience index. We apply it to England's coastal hazard zone, capturing a range of different stakeholder perspectives using relative indicator weightings. The illustrative results demonstrate the practicality of formalising and quantifying resilience. To re-focus national policy around the stated desire of enhancing resilience to coastal flooding and erosion would require firm commitment from government to monitor progress towards resilience, requiring extension of the present risk-based approach, and a consensus methodology in which multiple (and sometimes conflicting) stakeholder values are explicitly considered. Such a transition may also challenge existing governance arrangements at national and local levels, requiring incentives for coastal managers to engage with and apply this new approach, more departmental integration and inter-agency cooperation. The proposed Coastal Resilience Model, with the tools to support planning and measure progress, has the potential to help enable this transition. (c) 2021 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http:// creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

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