Periodic Reporting for period 1 - SEA-LIMITHS (Sea Level Rise Impacts on Italian Hospitality)
Okres sprawozdawczy: 2023-06-01 do 2025-05-31
SEA-LIMITHS (Sea Level Rise Impacts on Italian Hospitality) develops the first integrated evaluation framework for climate risks to coastal tourism infrastructure. Focusing on Veneto and Emilia-Romagna, regions hosting Venice and the Adriatic Riviera, the project quantifies economic vulnerabilities and informs evidence-based adaptation strategies. The interdisciplinary approach combines environmental science, economics, and artificial intelligence to map over 10,000 hospitality establishments, calculate flood damages under future climate scenarios, and assess economy-wide impacts through computable general equilibrium modelling.
The project directly supports the European Green Deal and EU Adaptation Strategy by protecting tourism-dependent coastal communities. Given that coastal regions generate 40% of European tourism revenue, the project's impact pathway extends from local business resilience to European economic competitiveness.
Key technical achievements include: (1) Creation of multi-floor damage functions capturing both direct infrastructure losses and business interruption costs; (2) Integration of storm surge modelling with sea level rise projections for compound flood risk assessment; (3) Development of sector-specific vulnerability indicators accounting for seasonal occupancy patterns and coastal proximity; (4) Implementation of CGE modeling revealing economy-wide multiplier effects averaging 50-fold amplification of direct damages.
The economic assessment reveals Expected Annual Damages of €21.3 million for Veneto and €12.4 million for Emilia-Romagna under end-of-century scenarios. Critically, indirect business interruption losses constitute 55% of total damages, highlighting the importance of operational resilience beyond physical protection measures.
The open-access database (Zenodo DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.14929876) and documented methodology enable replication and scaling. Key needs for further uptake include: (1) Extension to additional coastal regions requiring local partnerships for data validation; (2) Integration with real-time monitoring systems for operational early warning; (3) Development of decision-support tools translating risk metrics into business-specific adaptation guidance; (4) Regulatory frameworks incentivizing proactive adaptation investments; (5) Financial mechanisms supporting small hospitality businesses in implementing resilience measures.