Sea-Level Rise and Storm Surges: High Stakes for a Small Number of Developing Countries

As the climate changes during the 21st century, larger cyclonic storm surges and growing populations may collide in disasters of unprecedented size. As conditions worsen, variations in coastal morphology will magnify the effects in some areas, while largely insulating others. In this article, we exp...

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Veröffentlicht in:The journal of environment & development 2012-03, Vol.21 (1), p.120-138
Hauptverfasser: Brecht, Henrike, Dasgupta, Susmita, Laplante, Benoit, Murray, Siobhan, Wheeler, David
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container_title The journal of environment & development
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creator Brecht, Henrike
Dasgupta, Susmita
Laplante, Benoit
Murray, Siobhan
Wheeler, David
description As the climate changes during the 21st century, larger cyclonic storm surges and growing populations may collide in disasters of unprecedented size. As conditions worsen, variations in coastal morphology will magnify the effects in some areas, while largely insulating others. In this article, we explore the implications for 31 developing countries and 393 of their cyclone-vulnerable coastal cities with populations greater than 100,000. Combining the most recent scientific and demographic information, we estimate the future impact of climate change on storm surges that will strike coastal populations, economies, and ecosystems. We focus on the distribution of heightened impacts, because we believe that greater knowledge of their probable variation will be useful for local and national planners, as well as international donors. Our results suggest gross inequality in the heightened impact of future disasters, with 50% of the burden falling on the residents of 10 Asian cities and over 40% falling on Manila, Karachi, and Jakarta alone. In light of these huge asymmetries, we believe that careful targeting of international assistance will be essential for the effective and equitable allocation of resources for coastal protection and disaster prevention.
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source PAIS Index; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing; SAGE Complete A-Z List
subjects Asia
Asians
Censuses
Cities
Climate
Climate change
Coastal
Coastal areas
Cyclones
Demographics
Developing countries
Disaster prevention
Disasters
Economics
Ecosystems
Emergency preparedness
Environmental change
Equality
Falling
Global warming
Inequality
LDCs
Manycountries
Marine
Natural disasters
Planners
Population
Population dynamics
Population growth
Populations
Prevention
Resource allocation
Sea level rise
Storm surges
Storms
Strikes
Studies
Tidal waves
Topographical elevation
World Bank
title Sea-Level Rise and Storm Surges: High Stakes for a Small Number of Developing Countries
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