Statistical characterization of projected flooding and erosion processes for coastal management
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
Frontiers Research Foundation
Materia
coastal erosion coastal flooding Climate change impact
Fecha
2025-09-02Referencia bibliográfica
Otiñar P, Cobos M, Santana M and Baquerizo A (2025) Statistical characterization of projected flooding and erosion processes for coastal management. Front. Mar. Sci. 12:1631047. doi: 10.3389/fmars.2025.1631047
Patrocinador
Junta de Andalucía – Consejería de Universidad, Investigación e Innovación – Proyecto (Ref. ProyExcel_00375, EPICOS); Junta de Andalucía — Consejería de Transformación Económica, Industria, Conocimiento y Universidades (POSTDOC_21_00724); Junta de Andalucía y Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional (FEDER) (Exped. Contr. 2018-66984 y 2020-687686)Resumen
Despite significant scientific progress in developing long-term projections of
coastal impacts and the growing concern of public authorities, the transfer of
knowledge from academia to policy remains less effective than desired. As a result,
the legal and administrative frameworks guiding coastal management are often
misaligned with the latest scientific evidence. To help address this gap, we present a
procedure for the stochastic characterization of erosion and flooding, aimed at
supporting informed management decision-making using projections under a
climate change scenario. The approach focuses on a comprehensive collection
of random sets defined in accordance with the Spanish regulatory framework and
the needs of the regional administrative authority responsible for granting permits
and concessions for the use and/or occupation of land within the public maritimeterrestrial domain in Andalusia (Spain). The study analyses the spatial and temporal
variability of these random sets in probabilistic terms across different time horizons.
These time frames are introduced to harmonize the definitions and criteria
established in legal texts with the mandate to account for climate change
impacts. Statistical analyses are also conducted for both peak and off-peak tourist
seasons, as well as on annual time scales, to support managerial decision-making
based on the specific characteristics of the coastal management issues at hand,
including their potential seasonal nature. The results, obtained for the provinces of
Granada and Almerıa along the Mediterranean Andalusian coast for the high- ́
emissions Representative Concentration Pathway scenario (RCP 8.5), underscore
the importance of considering specific time horizons—and, when relevant, seasonal
variability—when authorizing uses and concessions in coastal zones. In this regard,
it was found that by 2100, 40% of beaches in the studied provinces are projected to
lose over 80% of their dry beach area during the off-peak tourist season, with only
33% of them failing to recover by the tourist season. This highlights the importance
of considering natural recovery capacities in coastal management to potentially
avoid drastic interventions. Furthermore, the analysis reveals the high sensitivity of
the parameters currently used in Spanish legislation to define the public maritimeterrestrial domain and to identify areas of severe coastal regression, along with their
implications along the coastline.





