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Socio-Economic Assessment of Ecosystem-Based and Other Adaptation Strategies in Coastal Areas: A Systematic Review

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jmse11020319

Keywords

climate-change adaptation; coastal cities; ecosystem-based adaptation (EbA); socio-economic assessment; systematic literature review

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Coastal areas are vulnerable to climate change hazards, and ecosystem-based adaptation (EbA) is gaining importance as it offers multiple benefits compared to traditional approaches. This study reviews socio-economic assessments of climate change adaptation in coastal areas, finding that cost-benefit analysis is commonly used. Hybrid adaptation strategies combining hard, soft, and EbA interventions are considered as optimal solutions. The study highlights potential co-benefits of EbA but emphasizes the need for further research and evaluation of its long-term performance under changing climate conditions.
Coastal areas are highly vulnerable to climate-change hazards (e.g., sea-level rise, flooding, coastal erosion), which can lead to significant impacts at the ecosystem and societal level. Interest in ecosystem-based adaptation (EbA) is gaining importance due to its potential multiple benefits, including social and environmental aspects, when compared to more traditional approaches such as hard engineering interventions. When assessing EbA strategies, further understanding of the nature-society functions, processes, values, and benefits is needed to increase its application. This study contributes to better knowledge of EbA and other adaptation strategies by developing a systematic literature review of studies performing socio-economic assessments of climate-change adaptation in coastal areas. The analysis of 54 publications revealed that cost-benefit analysis was applied in most studies, followed by multi-criteria analysis and other techniques. Hybrid adaptation strategies based on different combinations of hard, soft, and EbA interventions were considered as potential optimal solutions in a significant part of the assessments. This study shows some potential co-benefits of EbA, such as livelihood diversification or biodiversity conservation, but also stresses the need for further research on this topic, as well as on evaluating how EbA performs in the long term under changing climate-condition scenarios.

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