Dear colleagues,

Please see the recent article by Tracy Kijewski-Correa, Debra Javeline,
Angela Chesler, and myself in *Climate Policy* in case it is of interest to
any of you.

We argue that uptake of property-level adaptation measures among coastal
homeowners is driven largely by the perception that these measures add
resale value to the home, not as conventional wisdom suggests, the belief
that they are effective at reducing damages from the impacts of climate
change.

You can find the full paper here:
https://doi.org/10.1080/14693062.2023.2215207, a Twitter thread summarizing
the findings here:
https://twitter.com/billkakenmaster/status/1661712600290275328?s=20, and
the abstract below.

Thank you very much!

Best wishes,

*Bill Kakenmaster*
PhD Student, University of Notre Dame
2060 Jenkins Nanovic Hall, Notre Dame, IN 46657
Email: wkake...@nd.edu

--

*Economic Incentives for Coastal Homeowner Adaptation to Climate Change*

Communities are already grappling with climate change’s acute effects,
evidenced by the growing frequency and intensity of extreme events
worldwide. Strategies to encourage adaptation to climate change are
urgently needed, particularly to preempt common ineffective and maladaptive
responses. The United States provides a notable case study for testing the
potential for economic incentives to drive voluntary adaptation in
vulnerable coastal communities where mandates through building codes have
proven insufficient to limit economic losses. This paper analyzes a novel
survey of 662 coastal households in the hurricane-exposed state of North
Carolina. Our findings suggest that homeowners who believe adaptation
measures increase the market value of their homes are more likely to have
homes with these upgrades. Furthermore, they are more likely to have taken
actions to upgrade their homes after purchase and to express stronger
intentions to invest in future upgrades. While perceived affordability
plays a role in their upgrading actions, it seems unrelated to future
intentions. Uptake, or intended uptake, of climate adaptation measures by
coastal homeowners is not driven by the perceived efficacy in preventing
future losses, challenging a tactic commonly used in policy messaging.
Instead, reducing climate-related hurricane losses requires a greater
valuation of climate adaptation measures in real estate markets. The need
to elevate market value over efficacy in governmental and non-governmental
efforts to promote adaptation may be relevant to adaptation for other types
of extreme events or in other locations globally where real estate is a
prized investment with the potential for significant returns.

--
*Bill Kakenmaster*
PhD Student, University of Notre Dame
2060 Jenkins Nanovic Hall, Notre Dame, IN 46657
Email: wkake...@nd.edu

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