Academic papers  •  Oceans, seas & sea ice

Reframing managed retreat for climate adaptation strategy

By Massimiliano Tripodo

Published March 24, 2026

Climate change is increasing risks for coastal communities, especially due to sea level rise and more frequent extreme events. Managed retreat, defined as the planned relocation of people and assets away from high-risk areas, is emerging as a key strategy to reduce long-term exposure, avoid escalating costs, and support resilient development.

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Climate change is increasing risks for coastal areas, mainly through rising sea levels and more extreme events. Sea levels have already risen by about 20 cm and could rise up to 1 meter or more by 2100. This makes traditional coastal defenses more expensive and less effective.

Climate disasters have caused huge economic losses (about $3.64 trillion since 1970), and coastal flooding alone could cost over $1 trillion per year by 2050 if no action is taken. Because of this, adaptation is both an environmental and economic necessity.

One key strategy is managed retreat, which means moving people and infrastructure away from high-risk coastal areas. Although it has often been used only after disasters, there is now a shift toward planning it in advance.

Research shows that continuing to protect risky coastal areas with defenses is very costly and often unsustainable. In contrast, managed retreat can reduce long-term costs, avoid repeated damage, and even provide economic benefits—such as $6 gained for every $1 spent in some relocation programs.

Retreat also allows natural ecosystems to recover, improving flood protection and storing carbon. Acting early is especially important, as proactive relocation is cheaper and less disruptive than reacting after disasters.

Overall, managed retreat is presented as a practical and cost-effective solution to reduce future risks, avoid inefficient investments, and support more sustainable and resilient development in coastal regions.

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