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April 28, 2025

Multistakeholder solutions for urban resilience for coastal cities

A conceptual framework for addressing urban flash floods and waterlogging hazards to building resilient and sustainable strategies. Credit: Risk Sciences (2025). DOI: 10.1016/j.risk.2025.100011
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A conceptual framework for addressing urban flash floods and waterlogging hazards to building resilient and sustainable strategies. Credit: Risk Sciences (2025). DOI: 10.1016/j.risk.2025.100011

Rapid urbanization and climate change are intensifying urban flash floods and waterlogging, especially in coastal cities. In a new study in Risk Sciences, a duo of researchers explore the growing challenges and offer practical solutions for building resilient and sustainable cities.

"In the face of accelerated urbanization and the growing frequency of extreme weather events, cities across the Global South are increasingly vulnerable to flash floods and waterlogging," explains co-author Z. R. M. Abdullah Kaiser.

"Chittagong, the second-largest city in Bangladesh, is emblematic of this crisis. Its coastal location, combined with rapid and often unplanned urban expansion, aging infrastructure, poor drainage systems, and weak environmental governance, has made the city highly susceptible to seasonal urban flooding and water stagnation—disrupting lives, damaging infrastructure, and threatening long-term sustainability."

The study employs a qualitative case study approach based on 48 in-depth, semi-structured interviews with stakeholders from public, private, academic, and nonprofit sectors, complemented by direct field observations in key flood-prone zones.

"Rather than relying on simulations or big data models, our research draws on lived experiences and institutional insights to explore the multifaceted causes, impacts, and possible solutions to recurring urban water crises," adds Kaiser.

The key findings highlight the compounded role of governance failures, uncoordinated mega projects, inadequate waste management, destruction of natural water bodies, and climate-induced pressures such as rising sea levels and intense monsoon rainfall. The impacts are wide-ranging—spanning economic loss, traffic paralysis, public health concerns, ecological degradation, and the displacement of vulnerable urban populations.

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"Our findings emphasize the need for an integrated, multistakeholder approach to urban flood resilience. Stakeholders proposed concrete actions including the implementation of Sustainable Urban Drainage Systems (SUDS), improved zoning and land-use planning, investment in green infrastructure, stronger legal frameworks for , and inclusive urban governance," says Kaiser.

"Emphasis was also placed on , , and aligning local policies with the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), particularly SDG 11 (Sustainable Cities) and SDG 13 (Climate Action)."

This research contributes to the understanding of risk, resilience, and sustainability in , offering actionable insights for policymakers, urban planners, and development agencies committed to transforming vulnerable urban areas into resilient, inclusive, and sustainable spaces.

More information: Z. R. M. Abdullah Kaiser et al, From risk to resilience and sustainability: Addressing urban flash floods and waterlogging, Risk Sciences (2025).

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Coastal cities face heightened risks of flash floods and waterlogging due to rapid urbanization, inadequate infrastructure, and climate change. Key factors include governance failures, poor waste management, and loss of natural water bodies. Integrated, multistakeholder strategies—such as SUDS, green infrastructure, and inclusive governance—are essential for urban resilience and sustainability.

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.