1. Introduction
It has been demonstrated that global sea levels have been rising over the past five decades and will continue to rise in the years to come, even beyond the year 2100, for many centuries [
1]. In the last century, the global rate of Sea Level Rise (SLR) was approximately 1.7 mm per year; the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) estimated an SLR of 1.8 mm per year between the mid-20th century until 2003 [
2], which was followed by a more significant increase to 3.3 mm per year during the last decade [
3]. IPCC also proposes global SLR projections between 1990 and 2100 ranging from 0.6 to 2.6 feet [
1]. Gallivan, Bailey [
4] has proven that most of the Atlantic Coast and Gulf Coast have been experiencing an SLR of 2.03 to 3.05 cm per decade during the last century.
Coastal planners, researchers, and government officials have renewed concerns about the compounding effects of storm surge and SLR [
5]. Storm surge is a tsunami-like phenomenon, and it can temporarily raise sea levels beyond the tide range [
6]. Surging waves are powerful and destructive and can cause terrible damages to coastal properties. In the last decade, researchers have attempted to relate storm surges to SLR. For example, Frumhoff, McCarthy [
7] found that a 100-year storm surge is likely to occur every four years because rising sea-levels provide a higher starting point for all future surges; that is to say, increases in sea levels can amplify the impacts of a storm event and the resulting flooding. Several papers identify the flood heights by adding SLR to surge heights. Kleinosky, Yarnal [
8] estimated the vulnerability of roads in Hampton (Virginia) by considering the compounding effect of storm surge with SLR. Frazier, Wood [
9] quantified the joint effects on the Coast of Sarasota County in Florida. Several other studies have included SLR into the dynamic modeling of storm surge [
10,
11].
Storm surges with SLR have brought huge devastation to societies in the 20th century [
12,
13]. According to Hanson, Nicholls [
14], there are millions of exposed people and billions of exposed assets vulnerable to the storm events and SLR at the global scale. SLR has the following effects on coastal regions: loss of wetlands, inundation of property, shoreline erosion, and saltwater intrusion [
15]. Significant amounts of research have made attempts to quantify the impacts of storm surge or SLR on the built environment in coastal areas. The annual loss of real estate from inundation due to the projected sea-level rise (45 inches by 2100) will be up to
$360 billion [
16]. Over the past 20 years, several papers have quantified the impacts of SLR in Florida. For example, Stanton and Ackerman [
17] estimated that the value of affected residential real estate will be more than
$130 billion with SLR in Florida. Harrington and Walton [
18] estimated the lost property value in Monroe County to be up to 5.8 billion with 1.65 m SLR.
To prevent further damage of intensified storm surges and SLR, making large investments and associated maintenance costs became a significant issue in the coastal protection process. Hence, it is important for community leaders to understand the costs and benefits when defining protection and implementing a specific adaptation strategy.
There exists limited and fragmented literature in assessing the cost effectiveness of adaptation strategies—particularly in the domain of real estate, while copious amounts of publications have emerged in agriculture since the 1990s [
19,
20,
21]. Some literature has focused on the energy sector [
22,
23,
24,
25] and water resource management [
26]. A small number of studies have been done on infrastructure [
27,
28]. Several studies have been conducted in transportation fields. For example, Lu and Peng [
29] developed a model of transportation network vulnerability to quantify the costs and benefits of SLR adaptation strategies. Moreover, two papers from Neumann, Hudgens [
30] calculated the benefits of assuming adaptations in both coastal and inland areas when faced with SLR. In terms of real estate, Kirshen, Knee [
31] assessed the expected values of annual damages of coastal buildings in metropolitan Boston by 2100 with several adaptation scenarios.
When it comes to quantifying the joint impacts of storm surge and SLR, resources are also limited. Kirshen, Knee [
31] modelled the impacts of SLR with storm surges, and the economic damage could be tens of billions of dollars to buildings in metropolitan Boston. A similar result was presented by Colgan and Merrill [
32], using coastal Maine as the study area. The Margulis [
33] predicted that the costs of adaptation for the developing world will increase from
$26 to
$89 billion per year by 2040.
The literature review of current economic evaluations of adaptation planning to climate change reveals two research gaps. First, studies assessing the cost effectiveness of adaptation actions at a local level are limited. National or regional-scale studies are abundant in terms of the ecosystem, agriculture, and transportation. Few of them identified the damage to real estate in coastal communities. Second, the joint effects of storm surge and SLR have drawn extensive public concern since 2005 because SLR provides a higher “starting point” for future storm surges, whereas, their compounding effects are often ignored at the local level and much larger than purely summing up their separate effects.
In both short and long terms, it is critical to fully understand the cost effectiveness of adaptation strategies for the built environment. It is a difficult task, however, to estimate the economic impacts of the joint effects of storm surge and SLR, because the bridge between natural hazards and the social economy is complex. The purpose of this paper is to provide an economic reference for local governments when they make decisions and to help communities invest in adaptation strategies in the long run.
4. Discussions
4.1. Uncertainties of Models and Parameters
This study is essentially a simulation of reality. Many have argued that models are different levels of the approximations of observed phenomena [
45,
46] rather than perfect replicas of the objects. Computer simulation integrated with risk probability climate change uncertainty is still a much debated area and has to be validated through field study and qualitative judgment [
47,
48]. Thus, this paper aims at developing a generable framework of cost-benefit analysis—instead of offering a highly accurate figure for the municipality of Miami to gauge the possible loss due to a potential storm surge.
Second, there are several uncertainties in terms of the parameters in this study, which may influence the accuracy of the results. The most uncertain parameters are the rates of SLR and the intensity of storm surge. The global rate of SLR has been accelerating in recent decades, so to predict it with a high accuracy is extremely difficult. Furthermore, it is not a consensus that SLR appears at a constant rate. Moreover, the situations become more unpredictable when the predictions are extrapolated into 2100, since SLR from 0.7 to 1.7 m by the end of this century has been justified to be reasonable by different scientists or organizations [
49,
50,
51]. For example, Vermeer and Rahmstorf [
52] predicted in 2009 that the sea level has been rising at a high-and-low rate, thus the economic damages of the joint effects of storm surge and SLR are shown as a range rather than fixed numbers. This study assumes that storm surge damage is changed only through SLR, but it is also significantly affected by pressure, wind, and other factors [
53]. Therefore, this assumption deserves validation by future simulations and field observations. The final uncertainty is that 1 percent of appreciation for real estate is conservative. In the last 50 years, the annual real estate appreciation in Miami was 1%, but increased to 1.5% in the last 20 years. Historic data shows the appreciation rate is also increasing, thus 1% real estate appreciation may be accurate for 10 to 20 years, but definitely conservative beyond the year 2050.
4.2. Other Crucial Aspects of Cost-Benefit Analysis
Land use changes were not considered in the case study. The assumption that urban form remains unchanged over the next several decades is problematic. Researchers have to make a trade-off when addressing climate change-related issues. In other words, SLR is a slow going process, but urban expansion is appreciable in coastal cities. While SLR becomes apparent only after several decades, urban development can be obvious within a few years. How to balance such inconsistency in growth rates remain a major challenge for climate change scientists. Land use change, particularly in urbanized areas, is also controlled by such variables as governmental regulation, zoning and comprehensive planning, economic growth, and population immigration. As the global economy recovers and the coast consistently attracts population, future studies should factor these variables into similar analyses or hazard resilience research.
Another limitation of the current study is that it only considers levees built along the Miami River where storm surge is expected to cause huge damages. The study excluded the seawalls that are constructed near beaches and can combat the direct consequences of SLR. It also did not consider other adaptation strategies such as beach nourishment, realignment of the coast, and the elevation of vulnerable structures. These countermeasures to SLR are focal points for cost-benefit analysis as well.
Finally, the current study only accounts for direct benefits and costs, but indirect dimensions of the analysis are also important. Indirect costs, apart from construction and maintenance expenditure, may result from the affected recreational value of the coast and impaired ecosystem services. Indirect benefits of levees may include the protected efficiency of transportation systems during and after storms, avoided travel time delays, preserved coastal scenery, and sustained property values. These considerations can be integrated into future research.
4.3. Integrating the Analysis into Coastal Disaster Management
The cost-benefit analysis should not be confined only to levees and needs to embrace other adaptation strategies. Accelerated climate change due to human activities requires the rethinking of hazard risk management to incorporate the BCA approach. Traditional disaster management practice has four successive phases: mitigation, preparedness, response, and recovery [
54]. The preparedness phase requires the consideration of a combination of adaptation strategies that are “no-regret” and cost-efficient. Early implementation ensures a significant reduction of adaptation costs in the long term [
55]. Therefore, cost-benefit appraisal can be a useful guidance for the design and deployment of countermeasures to SLR in the preparedness phase. It should be a critical component of a broader risk-based policy assessment under an integrated disaster management framework. Specifically, during preparation, the (in)direct costs and benefits of different adaptation strategies should be calculated and contrasted. This process is accompanied by uncertainty considerations based on sensitivity analysis regarding climate change scenarios, discount rates of monetary values, and the layout of defense systems. The results could then inform decision makers as to which strategies are to be implemented and where to deploy these.
The implementation of adaptation strategies is also determined by a variety of additional factors. These variables include the economic atmosphere of the whole region, impacts on leading industry, socio-political sensitivity of the region’s constituents that are threatened by SLR, and coastal disasters [
56]. Policymakers should formulate adaptation measures by a holistic multicriteria analysis based on these variables.
Policymakers should consider the feasibility of action plans in the near, medium, and long term. Protection and accommodation strategies—such as seawalls, levees, and beach nourishment—may generate short-term benefits and are less controversial in terms of implementation, but they are less cost-efficient in the long term. However, the resettlement of vulnerable populations could produce long-term benefits but generate huge costs in the short term. Thus, policymakers should be aware that planned retreat may be strongly objected by stakeholders, unless they provide convincing cost-benefit analysis and assess other important factors that were mentioned previously.
The responsible parties and beneficiaries of adaptation strategies should be determined. Such questions may be raised to governments as to who will benefit from and will pay for adaptation strategies. This information may be used to identify primary taxpayers who will be protected by proposed seawalls. A social study can be conducted to investigate how much households are willing to pay for the construction and maintenance of seawalls, and governments could use this information to leverage the development of vulnerable regions, where unaffordable residents will choose to relocate because of high protection costs.
Finally, a centerpiece for successful adaptation is to build an adaptive and capacity building institution system. The failure of adaptation largely results from a lack of institutional capacity [
45]. Therefore, a strong institutional capacity for enforcement is the key to policy implementation [
56]. It requires central governments to devolve powers and responsibilities to local governmental agencies and properly allocate resources and authority. A well-coordinated network should be established to connect different agencies to enforce disaster management practices. Coastal disaster management is to be integrated into land use policies and laws. Policymakers should tolerate the uncertainties underlying risk-based analysis and develop land use plans that are responsive to these uncertainties.
5. Conclusions
As Harrington and Walton proposed in 2008, the estimated lost property value at a county level is up to 5.8 billion with 1.65 m SLR. However, the cumulative damage by the year 2100 at a city level is approaching almost $1 billion, which indicates that the joint effects of storm surge and SLR exceed the expected effects. Hence, this paper conducted a cost-benefit analysis of building levees in the City of Miami, a region that is highly vulnerable to SLR.
The results suggest the following policy implications for adaptation planning:
It is imperative to conduct a BCA early in the project development process to ensure the possibility of meeting cost effective parameters. Understanding the costs and benefits of adaptation strategies before putting them into practice is critical for making fiscally-responsible decisions.
Faced with more severe storm surges and rising sea levels, implementing adaptation strategies are more cost-efficient than doing nothing. The results can be far more significant when we calculate the cumulative economic impacts due to increased storm surges and SLR; nevertheless, adaptation mechanisms can help communities benefit in the future and increase their resiliency.
The joint effects of storm surges and SLR cannot be disregarded anymore. Their effects cannot be seen as simply addition or subtraction. The compounding effects of storm surge and SLR depend heavily upon the adaptation protections.
To achieve minimum risk and protect the habitability of the built environment, the local government must have a high awareness of their community’s vulnerability and be clear about when, where, and how to invest in an adaptation project.
However, the economy is only one facet in the decision-making process. For every undertaking of such a project, decision-makers need to consider as many substantial challenges as possible, such as technical, economic, social, and environmental aspects. In the case of building levees, which belongs to somewhat no-regret actions, it is imperative to consider the comprehensive economic, social, ecological, and environmental effects, and even cultural factors, before making any decisions.