New Study Projects Climate-Driven Flooding for Thousands of New Jersey Homes

April 3, 2025

Some 62,000 people and 56,000 homes on and near the New Jersey Shore will see at least one annual flood because of sea-level rise by 2050, even if the world makes sweeping cuts to carbon emissions now, according to a new online tool released Wednesday by Climate Central, a New Jersey-based research and advocacy nonprofit.

The number of New Jersey residents facing annual flooding by 2050 rises to 68,000 under current “moderate” global commitments to reduce heat-trapping emissions, according to data from Coastal Risk Finder, an updated tool that allows users along the nation’s coastlines to identify and plan for their future flood risk under different scenarios.

Unchecked global climate pollution would result in 74,000 New Jersey residents in 66,000 homes facing increased flood risk over the next 25 years. The Climate Central tool uses sea-level rise projections by the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change for all three scenarios…

Another effort to anticipate coastal flooding in New Jersey as seas rise is NJ Adapt, a suite of data-visualization and mapping tools assembled by Rutgers University to help planners, businesses, communities and residents understand and adapt to climate-change effects. The project includes a Climate Planning Tool that explains why seas are rising, and tracks their effects on New Jersey communities, including Atlantic City. There, seas have been rising by 0.15 millimeter a year for the last century, exposing it to increased future flooding.

Lucas Marxen, co-director of the New Jersey Climate Change Resource Center at Rutgers, said the new Climate Central tool is easy for the public to navigate, provides clear information on areas at risk and offers citizens solutions to flooding, a feature that he said is not often found in such tools.

But he said the tool’s description of flood risk may lead users to misunderstand the frequency and severity of future floods. For instance, a “100-year” flood has a force that’s deemed to have a 1 percent chance of happening in any year, but which can happen more frequently than once a century, such as with Hurricane Irene in August 2011, which was closely followed by Hurricane Sandy in October 2012.

“The language used by Climate Central may mislead the public as to the real risk of these types of flood events,” he said.

Inside Climate News, April 3, 2025

Recent Posts

STEM Pathways are a Two-Way Street, Not a “Leaky Pipeline”

A new article in the Journal for STEM Education Research challenges the longstanding “leaky pipeline” narrative that has shaped U.S. education and workforce policy for decades. The article, “Reconceptualizing College STEM Pathways: Is ‘Leaving STEM’ the Problem?”, was...

NJSPL: New Jersey’s New E-Bike Laws – What Comes Next?

New Jersey’s New E-Bike Laws: Safety, Impact, and What Comes Next Leigh Ann Von Hagen & Gabrielle Cain In recent years, e-bikes have become an increasingly popular form of micromobility, which are small, lightweight transportation devices designed for short trips...

Heldrich: Aligning NJ’s AI Policy with Small Business Needs

Researchers at the Heldrich Center for Workforce Development, with funding from the New Jersey State Policy Lab, are currently engaged in a project to examine how New Jersey’s public Artificial Intelligence (AI) initiatives can better align with the evolving needs of...

EJB Talks: Planning, Policy, Politics, and the Path to Office

Planning, Policy, Politics, and the Path to Office with Assemblywoman Katie Brennan This week on EJB talks, Dean Stuart Shapiro talks to Bloustein alumnus Katie Brennan MCRP '12, now an Assemblywoman in New Jersey's 32nd District. Katie reflects on how her early...