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Coastal cities alarmingly slow to adapt to climate change: study

(Reuters)
29 Aug 2024 15:02

PARIS (AFP)

Coastal cities are not doing enough to adapt to climate change, taking too long and implementing insufficient measures, according to a major study published this week.

While flood barriers and pumping systems are a step in the right direction, "across all regions and income groups, scientifically reported adaptation in coastal cities remains at rather low depth, scope and speed," said the study published in Nature Cities, which looked at 199 cities worldwide.

Given the high exposure and vulnerability of many coastal cities, "this finding is alarming as an adaptation to future climate change will require many cities to go beyond business as usual risk management," it said.

Short- and mid-term solutions, as many cities are implementing, could even have an adverse effect, the study warned, leading to a "lock-in and maladaptive path dependency in the long-term."

Instead, adaptation must aim at the "transformation" of cities -- a change both in infrastructure and at the institutional level.

Positive models cited in the report include Singapore, Hong Kong, and several other Swedish cities.

However, in the majority, the study found that coastal cities focus primarily on combating sea level rise, various types of flooding, and, to a lesser extent, the risks posed by erosion and storms.

For scientists, such a scope is too narrow, and cities need to address other problems linked to climate change, such as heat waves.

Institutions and households

By comparing data from 199 cities in 683 scientific articles, the researchers found that the actors' driving adaptation changed according to the country and income category.

The richest coastal areas take a technological approach to dealing with climate change, and the significant players are institutions.

Meanwhile, lower-income cities located mainly in Africa, Asia, and South and Central America have no other choice but to rely on a "behavioural and cultural" effort for populations to adapt.

In lower-income coastal cities, there is a lack of institutional and technological support, making it "more likely individuals/households are reported as prime adaptation actors."

The poorest economies remain under-represented in the scientific literature, complicating their adaptation.

"A considerable gap in research that needs to be addressed urgently," the study warned.

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