Shifting landscapes of coastal flood risk: environmental (in)justice of urban change, sea level rise, and differential vulnerability in New York City

Abstract Climate-driven changes in coastal flood risk have enormous consequences for coastal cities. These risks intersect with unequal patterns of environmental hazards exacerbating differential vulnerability of climate related flooding. Here we analyze differential vulnerability of coastal floodin...

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Main Authors: Pablo Herreros-Cantis, Veronica Olivotto, Zbigniew J. Grabowski, Timon McPhearson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-07-01
Series:Urban Transformations
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s42854-020-00014-w
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spelling doaj-172981b3d84e48daad0f08199f5ca5b52020-11-25T02:57:36ZengBMCUrban Transformations2524-81622020-07-012112810.1186/s42854-020-00014-wShifting landscapes of coastal flood risk: environmental (in)justice of urban change, sea level rise, and differential vulnerability in New York CityPablo Herreros-Cantis0Veronica Olivotto1Zbigniew J. Grabowski2Timon McPhearson3Urban Systems Lab, The New SchoolUrban Systems Lab, The New SchoolUrban Systems Lab, The New SchoolUrban Systems Lab, The New SchoolAbstract Climate-driven changes in coastal flood risk have enormous consequences for coastal cities. These risks intersect with unequal patterns of environmental hazards exacerbating differential vulnerability of climate related flooding. Here we analyze differential vulnerability of coastal flooding in New York City, USA, as an environmental justice issue caused by shifts in flood risk due to increasing floodplain extents. These extents are represented by updates to the 100-year floodplain by the Federal Emergency Management Agency, and urban changes in land use, land value, and socio-economic characteristics of flood exposed populations. We focus on six local community districts containing disproportionately vulnerable communities. Across our study areas, we observed increases in the floodplain’s extent by 45.7%, total exposed population by 10.5%, and population living in vulnerable communities by 7.5%. Overall flood risk increases regardless of increases in the updated floodplain extent, as do floodplain property values. However, variability is high between community districts; in some cases, increases in exposure coincide with decreases in vulnerability due to shifts in racial demographics and increases in income (i.e. potential floodplain gentrification), while others experienced increases in exposure and vulnerability (i.e. double jeopardy). These findings highlight that the dominant drivers of coastal flood risk in NYC are ongoing real estate development and continued increases in sea level rise and storm severity, both of which have explicit implications for flood vulnerability. We describe the social processes governing development in the flood zone, namely zoning, resilience planning, and the determination of potential flooding severity and related insurance rates. We also discuss how these social drivers of risk intersect with social dimensions of vulnerability due to racist housing markets, and the distributions of public housing and toxic chemical hazards. We conclude with a framework for the analysis of contextual and outcome-based vulnerability to coastal flood hazards, and provide policy recommendations to reduce risks over the medium to long term.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s42854-020-00014-wCoastal floodingFlood riskFlood hazardFloodplainSea level riseEnvironmental justice
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pablo Herreros-Cantis
Veronica Olivotto
Zbigniew J. Grabowski
Timon McPhearson
spellingShingle Pablo Herreros-Cantis
Veronica Olivotto
Zbigniew J. Grabowski
Timon McPhearson
Shifting landscapes of coastal flood risk: environmental (in)justice of urban change, sea level rise, and differential vulnerability in New York City
Urban Transformations
Coastal flooding
Flood risk
Flood hazard
Floodplain
Sea level rise
Environmental justice
author_facet Pablo Herreros-Cantis
Veronica Olivotto
Zbigniew J. Grabowski
Timon McPhearson
author_sort Pablo Herreros-Cantis
title Shifting landscapes of coastal flood risk: environmental (in)justice of urban change, sea level rise, and differential vulnerability in New York City
title_short Shifting landscapes of coastal flood risk: environmental (in)justice of urban change, sea level rise, and differential vulnerability in New York City
title_full Shifting landscapes of coastal flood risk: environmental (in)justice of urban change, sea level rise, and differential vulnerability in New York City
title_fullStr Shifting landscapes of coastal flood risk: environmental (in)justice of urban change, sea level rise, and differential vulnerability in New York City
title_full_unstemmed Shifting landscapes of coastal flood risk: environmental (in)justice of urban change, sea level rise, and differential vulnerability in New York City
title_sort shifting landscapes of coastal flood risk: environmental (in)justice of urban change, sea level rise, and differential vulnerability in new york city
publisher BMC
series Urban Transformations
issn 2524-8162
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Abstract Climate-driven changes in coastal flood risk have enormous consequences for coastal cities. These risks intersect with unequal patterns of environmental hazards exacerbating differential vulnerability of climate related flooding. Here we analyze differential vulnerability of coastal flooding in New York City, USA, as an environmental justice issue caused by shifts in flood risk due to increasing floodplain extents. These extents are represented by updates to the 100-year floodplain by the Federal Emergency Management Agency, and urban changes in land use, land value, and socio-economic characteristics of flood exposed populations. We focus on six local community districts containing disproportionately vulnerable communities. Across our study areas, we observed increases in the floodplain’s extent by 45.7%, total exposed population by 10.5%, and population living in vulnerable communities by 7.5%. Overall flood risk increases regardless of increases in the updated floodplain extent, as do floodplain property values. However, variability is high between community districts; in some cases, increases in exposure coincide with decreases in vulnerability due to shifts in racial demographics and increases in income (i.e. potential floodplain gentrification), while others experienced increases in exposure and vulnerability (i.e. double jeopardy). These findings highlight that the dominant drivers of coastal flood risk in NYC are ongoing real estate development and continued increases in sea level rise and storm severity, both of which have explicit implications for flood vulnerability. We describe the social processes governing development in the flood zone, namely zoning, resilience planning, and the determination of potential flooding severity and related insurance rates. We also discuss how these social drivers of risk intersect with social dimensions of vulnerability due to racist housing markets, and the distributions of public housing and toxic chemical hazards. We conclude with a framework for the analysis of contextual and outcome-based vulnerability to coastal flood hazards, and provide policy recommendations to reduce risks over the medium to long term.
topic Coastal flooding
Flood risk
Flood hazard
Floodplain
Sea level rise
Environmental justice
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s42854-020-00014-w
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