Financing resilience efforts to confront future urban and sea-level rise flooding: Are coastal megacities in Association of Southeast Asian Nations doing enough?

Author:

Causevic Amar1ORCID,LoCastro Matthew2,David Dharish3,Selvakkumaran Sujeetha4,Gren Åsa5

Affiliation:

1. Global Economic Dynamics and the Biosphere Programme, The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, Sweden

2. Economic Research Institute for ASEAN and East Asia -- Henry Luce Foundation, Indonesia

3. Singapore Institute of Management – Global Education, Singapore

4. RISE Research Institutes of Sweden, Sweden

5. The Beijer Institute of Ecological Economics, The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, Sweden

Abstract

Continued greenhouse gas emissions will lead to a rise in temperatures, accompanied by rising sea levels threatening low-lying coastal cities. This vulnerability is especially acute in developing countries’ cities. This study reviews whether Bangkok, Manila, and Jakarta, less prepared emerging urban centers of developing countries, are investing in adaptation projects for resilience against sea-level rise and urban flooding. Sea-level rise and urban flooding resilience projects were identified in the selected cities through secondary research methods, data on multilateral climate funds, and other aggregated funding databases such as Aid Atlas, Cities Adaptation Action, and City Risk Index. Our findings show that even though these cities do have some adaptation projects to address coastal flooding and rising sea-level threats, the funding has been disparate and dispersed due to a lack of continuous, sizeable, and diverse financing options and does not come close to the requirement, given the risks, of covering potential disaster-related losses. Our findings further highlight the need to expand financing beyond multilateral funds and bilateral funding agreements and to include financial mechanisms that incentivize potential stakeholders to invest in projects that ordinarily are considered nonrevenue generating.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Nature and Landscape Conservation,Urban Studies,Geography, Planning and Development,Architecture

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