New! View the current published vulnerability assessments
Climate change impacts on sea level, storm surge, and shoreline erosion present unique hazards for coastal units of the National Park System. Visitor centers, roads, historic structures, and other park facilities are of particular concern, as they are often fixed in place, provide important services, and represent significant investments.
The National Park Service partnered with the Program for the Study of Developed Shorelines at Western Carolina University to create a Coastal Hazards and Sea-Level Rise Asset Vulnerability Assessment Protocol (2022), which built on the previous 2016 protocol document. This protocol establishes a standard methodology and set of best practices for conducting vulnerability assessments for coastal facilities. Standardizing the methodologies and data utilized in these assessments allows managers to compare the vulnerability of coastal park assets across local, regional, and national levels.
The assessments are currently focused on assets at risk to coastal hazards and sea-level rise within coastal parks. Coastal vulnerability was chosen as a starting point in the development of vulnerability assessments because of digital data availability and a good understanding of the trends in the major climate stressors (e.g., sea level). The vulnerability assessment protocol is being piloted for inland parks, as the methods can be applied to additional natural hazards and climate stressors, as long as georeferenced hazard data exists or can be mapped.
One of the primary goals of this protocol is to standardize methods for evaluating the exposure of NPS assets to coastal hazards and sea-level rise. This includes the standardization of data inputs (i.e., widely available, established data) that will allow the application of a consistent methodology among units. Another goal is to create a more complete and effective set of factors or indicators for assessing the sensitivity of assets to coastal hazards. The current focus for this protocol is on structures and transportation assets within the NPS asset database (Facilities Management Software System; FMSS), however, other resources will likely be included in future work.
- Acadia National Park [2017]
- Assateague Island National Seashore [2023]
- Big Cypress National Preserve [2015]
- Biscayne National Park [2015]
- Cabrillo National Monument [2017]
- Canaveral National Seashore [2016]
- Cape Cod National Seashore [2023]
- Cape Lookout National Seashore (pre-Dorian) [2017]
- Cape Lookout National Seashore (post-Dorian) [2023]
- Castillo de San Marcos National Monument and Fort Matanzas National Monument [2022]
- Charles Pinckney National Historic Site [2023]
- Colonial National Historical Park [2017]
- Cumberland Island National Seashore [2022]
- De Soto National Memorial [2022]
- Dry Tortugas National Park [2023]
- Everglades National Park [2022]
- Fire Island National Seashore [2018]
- Fort Frederica National Monument [2022]
- Fort McHenry National Monument And Historic Shrine [2023]
- Fort Monroe National Monument [2023]
- Fort Pulaski National Monument [2023]
- Fort Sumter National Monument [2016]
- George Washington Birthplace National Monument [2023]
- George Washington Memorial Parkway & Theodore Roosevelt Island [2017]
- Gulf Islands National Seashore [2015]
- Independence National Historical Park, Edgar Allen Poe National Historic Site, Thaddeus Kosciuszko National Memorial, and Gloria Dei Church National Historic Site [2023]
- Jean Lafitte National Historical Park & Preserve [2017]
- Manhattan Sites [2023]
- Moores Creek National Battlefield [2022]
- National Mall & Memorial Parks [2017]
- New Bedford Whaling National Historical Park & Roger Williams National Memorial [2019]
- Olympic National Park [2017]
- Outer Banks Group: Cape Hatteras National Seashore, Fort Raleigh National Historic Site, & Wright Brothers National Memorial [2018]
- Padre Island National Seashore [2017]
- Petersburg National Battlefield [2023]
- Sagamore Hill National Historic Site [2023]
- Saint Croix Island International Historic Site [2023]
- Salem Maritime National Historic Site [2023]
- San Juan National Historic Site [2023]
- Saugus Iron Works National Historic Site [2023]
- Sitka National Historical Park [2017]
- St. Croix Parks: Buck Island Reef National Monument, Christiansted National Historic Site, and Salt River Bay National Historical Park & Ecological Preserve [2023]
- Statue of Liberty National Monument [2022]
- Timucuan Ecological and Historic Preserve and Fort Caroline National Memorial [2022]
- Virgin Islands National Park [2023]
- War in the Pacific National Historical Park [2017]
Last updated: October 17, 2024