Office of Research and Development Publications

Rising Sea Levels: Helping Decision-Makers Confront the Inevitable

Citation:

Hall, J., C. Weaver, J. Obeysekera, M. Crowell, R. Horton, R. Kopp, J. Marburger, D. Marcy, A. Parris, W. Sweet, AND W. Veatch. Rising Sea Levels: Helping Decision-Makers Confront the Inevitable. Coastal Management. Taylor and Francis, Philadelphia, PA, 47(2):127-150, (2019). https://doi.org/10.1080/08920753.2019.1551012

Impact/Purpose:

This is a multi-agency review article that summarizes past U.S. federal efforts to assess evolving SLR science in support of coastal risk management. This review synthesizes across this body of work over and articulates key lessons learned and knowledge gaps going forward for support of planning and decision-making processes in the coastal zone.

Description:

Sea-level rise (SLR) is not just a future trend; it is occurring now in most coastal regions across the globe. It thus impacts not only long-range planning in coastal environments, but also emergency preparedness. Its inevitability and irreversibility on long time scales, in addition to its spatial non-uniformity, uncertain magnitude and timing, and capacity to drive non-stationarity in coastal flooding on planning and engineering timescales, create unique challenges for coastal risk-management decision processes. This review assesses past United States federal efforts to synthesize evolving SLR science in support of coastal risk management. In particular, it outlines the: (1) evolution in global SLR scenarios to those using a risk-based perspective that also considers low-probability but high-consequence outcomes, (2) regionalization of the global scenarios, and (3) use of probabilistic approaches. It also describes efforts to further contextualize regional scenarios by combining local mean sea-level changes with extreme water level projections. Finally, it offers perspectives on key issues relevant to the future uptake, interpretation, and application of sea-level change scenarios in decision-making. These perspectives have utility for efforts to craft standards and guidance for preparedness and resilience measures to reduce the risk of coastal flooding and other impacts related to SLR.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( JOURNAL/ PEER REVIEWED JOURNAL)
Product Published Date:01/24/2019
Record Last Revised:06/15/2020
OMB Category:Other
Record ID: 349111