Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11960/2936
Title: Choice experiments to elicit the users preferences for coastal erosion management : the case of Praia da Amorosa
Authors: Oliveira, Susana
Pinto, Lígia M. Costa
Keywords: Environmental valuation
Choice experiments
GMNL
Preference heterogeneity
Coastal erosion management
Issue Date: 2021
Citation: Oliveira, S., & Pinto, L. M. C. (2021). Choice experiments to elicit the users preferences for coastal erosion management: the case of Praia da Amorosa. Environment, Development and Sustainability, 23(7), 9749-9765. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10668-020-00768-0
Abstract: Coastal erosion is a complex and increasingly important problem, largely due to its efects and management strategies. The current context of climate change, together with centuries of human occupation of shorelines, adds pressure for the development of sustainable coastal management policies, the success of which crucially depends on the consideration of all stakeholders’ perspectives. This research investigates users’ preferences over alternative options of coastal erosion management. Through the implementation of a discrete choice experiment, respondents’ preferences regarding management alternatives are elicited, and their willingness to pay for alternatives’ attributes is estimated. The results show that respondents prefer some interventions to mitigate the problem rather than no action, and prefer lighter intervention (palisades, gangways) to heavy infrastructures (rockflls, seawalls, groynes). Moreover, the results show the presence of preference heterogeneity and thus the need to use more fexible and complex models. Based on the results obtained, it is possible to drive some policy implications. First, the do-nothing option is not viable from the population’s standpoint; second, although some type of coastal erosion protection is demanded by the general population, the preferred approach is for light forms, contrary to the policy adopted in the last century, and still overwhelmingly present in the territory. Lastly, given the considerable heterogeneity in respondents’ preferences, careful consideration of the welfare impact of coastal interventions by population segments is required.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11960/2936
ISSN: 1387-585X
Appears in Collections:ESTG - Artigos indexados à WoS/Scopus

Files in This Item:
File Description SizeFormat 
PAPER_InEnviDS_2021_SusanaOliveira.pdf835.08 kBAdobe PDFView/Open


Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.