Preserve or retreat? Willingness-to-pay for Coastline Protection in New South Wales
Ali Ardeshiri, Joffre Swait, Elizabeth C. Heagney, Mladen Kovac

TL;DR
This study assesses New South Wales residents' willingness to pay for coastline protection, revealing most are willing to pay regardless of erosion severity, with preferences varying by beach type, informing coastal management strategies.
Contribution
It introduces an innovative Latent Class Binary Logit model to accurately estimate willingness-to-pay, accounting for heterogeneity and non-responders in coastal valuation.
Findings
65% of population willing to pay for coastal protection
Willingness to pay is unaffected by erosion severity between 5-100%
Preferences vary significantly across different beach types
Abstract
Coastal erosion is a global and pervasive phenomenon that predicates a need for a strategic approach to the future management of coastal values and assets (both built and natural), should we invest in protective structures like seawalls that aim to preserve specific coastal features, or allow natural coastline retreat to preserve sandy beaches and other coastal ecosystems. Determining the most suitable management approach in a specific context requires a better understanding of the full suite of economic values the populations holds for coastal assets, including non-market values. In this study, we characterise New South Wales residents willingness to pay to maintain sandy beaches (width and length). We use an innovative application of a Latent Class Binary Logit model to deal with Yea-sayers and Nay-sayers, as well as revealing the latent heterogeneity among sample members. We find…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEconomic and Environmental Valuation
