Development policy affects coastal flood exposure in China more than sea-level rise

Publication date

2025-10

Authors

Wang, Yafei
Ye, Yuxuan
Nicholls, Robert J.
Olsson, Lennart
van Vuuren, Detlef P.ORCID 0000-0003-0398-2831ISNI 0000000040910093
Peterson, Garry
He, Yao
Li, Manchun
Fan, Jie
Scown, M.W.ORCID 0000-0003-0663-7937ISNI 0000000492921172

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Advisors

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Document Type

Article
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cc_by

Abstract

Effective coastal exposure assessments are crucial for adaptively managing threats from sea-level rise (SLR). Despite recent advances, global and regional assessments are constrained by omitting critical factors such as land-use change, failing to disaggregate potential impacts by land uses and oversimplifying land subsidence. Here we address these gaps by developing context-specific scenarios to 2100 based on a comprehensive analysis of Chinese coastal development policies. We integrate high-resolution simulations of population and land-system changes with inundation exposure assessments that incorporate SLR, land subsidence, tides and storm surges, offering a more nuanced understanding of coastal risks. Across our plausible set of downscaled scenarios of shared socioeconomic and representative concentration pathways, policy decisions have a bigger effect on what is exposed to coastal flooding until 2100 than does the magnitude of SLR. Hence, coastal policy decisions largely influence coastal risk and adaptation needs to 2100, demonstrating the necessity of appropriate policy design to manage coastal risks.

Keywords

Impact, Land, Protection, Storm-surge, SDG 15 - Life on Land

Citation

Wang, Y, Ye, Y, Nicholls, R J, Olsson, L, van Vuuren, D P, Peterson, G, He, Y, Li, M, Fan, J & Scown, M 2025, 'Development policy affects coastal flood exposure in China more than sea-level rise', Nature Climate Change, vol. 15, no. 10, pp. 1071–1077. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41558-025-02439-2