08/05/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 08/05/2024 11:54
The study explores the long-term economic impacts of the Coastal Barrier Resources System, a policy enacted in the 1980s that made certain high-risk areas ineligible for federal flood insurance policies, public infrastructure investments, and post-disaster aid.
Date
Aug. 5, 2024
Authors
Hannah Druckenmiller, Yanjun (Penny) Liao, Sophie Pesek, Margaret A. Walls, and Shan Zhang
Publication
Journal Article in Nature Climate ChangeReading time
1 minuteAs natural disasters grow in frequency and intensity with climate change, limiting the populations and properties in harm's way will be key to adaptation. This study evaluates one approach to discouraging development in risky areas-eliminating public incentives for development, such as infrastructure investments, disaster assistance and federal flood insurance. Using machine learning and matching techniques, we examine the Coastal Barrier Resources System (CBRS), a set of lands where these federal incentives have been removed. We find that the policy leads to lower development densities inside designated areas, increases development in neighbouring areas, reduces flood damages and alters local demographics. Our results suggest that the CBRS generates substantial savings for the federal government by reducing flood claims in the National Flood Insurance Program, while increasing the property tax base in coastal counties.
For more information, read the authors' related policy brief published in Nature Climate Change.
Sophie Pesek
University of California, Berkeley
Shan Zhang
Old Dominion University