The University of Copenhagen press release claiming that “over half of global coastal settlements are retreating inland due to intensifying climate risks” sounds like the sort of headline crafted to feed an increasingly popular narrative: coasts are becoming uninhabitable battlegrounds of climate doom, and people are fleeing for safety.
Like many such claims, it rests on a selective look at data, a sweeping interpretation of human motives, and an assumption that climate hazards dominate decision-making for developers and residents. In reality, economics—not climate fear—drives coastal development, and has for centuries. The study’s reliance on nighttime light data as a proxy for population movement adds yet another layer of uncertainty—particularly in developing regions where electrification is uneven.
The study itself if paywalled at Nature Communications, and I’m not going to throw good money at bad science. Fortunately, the press release itself provides enough clues to see the cracks in the narrative.

(All quotations below come directly from the press release.)
1. Developers Don’t Use “Climate Risk Models” to Choose Where to Build — They Follow Money, Not Models
The press release repeatedly frames changes in settlement patterns as “responses to intensifying climate risks.” But nowhere does it present evidence that actual developers, property investors, or residents are citing climate risk as their primary rationale for new construction.
That is because, almost without exception:
Developers build where buyers want to buy. Buyers choose based on economic opportunity, amenities, and cost—not abstract climate projections.
A few points worth emphasizing:
- Coastal real estate in the U.S., Europe, and Asia continues to command premium prices, rising faster than inland regions in many markets.
- Major insurers still willingly underwrite billions in coastal property—usually at higher premiums, but still entirely viable.
- Municipalities encourage coastal development because it boosts tax revenue.
- New flood defenses, sea walls, and drainage upgrades are being built all over the world—not as signs of retreat, but evidence of investment in staying put.
In short: if a region truly believed climate risks were rendering their coasts unlivable, the cost of coastal land would collapse. It hasn’t.
The study authors assume causation: “retreat” must mean fear of climate hazards. But unless they interviewed developers, tracked planning documents, or reviewed permit applications (they did none of these), the causal claim is pure inference, not evidence.
2. The “Nightlights = Retreat” Assumption Is a Giant Leap — Especially Where Electrification Is Uneven
The entire study hinges on a questionable premise: that satellite-detected nighttime light intensity is a reliable indicator of population movement toward or away from the coast.
Even the authors admit the weaknesses:
“Night-time light data may not tell the whole story, as economic activity and settlements extent are not necessarily linked to luminous activity in regions with limited electrification.”
This applies not just to Africa but to large parts of Asia and South America as well. If electrification improves inland faster than along the coast—because of grid expansion, economic development, industrial siting, or government investment—the “retreat” the study claims to detect might simply be the movement of electricity, not people.
In wealthy regions, the situation is reversed: coastal areas often have higher light saturation due to tourism, port operations, and commercial zoning. A modest shift in where industrial lighting is concentrated could dramatically skew the appearance of “retreat” or “advance.”
Nightlights are a useful tool, but only when paired with direct measurements of actual population counts—census data, property tax rolls, verified construction records.
The press release makes clear the study did not do this.
Without validating the light data against real-world settlement patterns, the resulting conclusions are, at best, speculative.
3. Coastal Population Trends Historically Show Growth, Not Retreat — Especially Relative to Inland Growth
To understand whether coastal communities are truly “retreating,” a simple question must be asked:
Are coastal populations shrinking relative to national population growth? Or are they growing, but at a slightly slower rate than in some inland regions?
There is a major difference between:
- People abandoning the coast, and
- Inland development simply growing faster (e.g., suburban sprawl, new industrial zones, tech corridors).
Historically, coastlines have grown faster than inland regions for centuries:
- In the U.S., coastal county populations have increased steadily since at least 1900.
- In Europe, major coastal cities—from Copenhagen to Rotterdam to Barcelona—continue expanding.
- Southeast Asia, despite frequent typhoons, has seen explosive growth in coastal megacities.
The press release itself hints at the real driver:
“For centuries, coastlines have attracted dense human settlement and economic activity.”
That hasn’t changed. Economic opportunities still cluster along the sea.
Before claiming a “retreat,” the authors should demonstrate:
- That actual population numbers in coastal zones have decreased, not just shifted slightly inland.
- That growth inland is not simply outpacing coastal growth because of cheaper land or new infrastructure, not climate fear.
The press release presents no such evidence.
4. Middle-Income Regions “Retreating” May Simply Be Developing New Land — Not Fleeing Climate Risks
A key claim:
“Middle-income countries… possess enough institutional capacity and financial resources to support relocation.”
Or—more plausibly—they possess the resources to expand infrastructure inland:
- New highways
- New industrial parks
- New housing blocks
- New suburban developments
When you pave a new ring road 5–15 km inland, suddenly the lights there brighten, and the satellite interprets this as “retreat,” even if the coastal population remains stable or grows.
Economic development ≠ climate retreat.
Urban sprawl ≠ climate retreat.
Electrification ≠ climate retreat.
Unless the authors can show that coastal property is being abandoned—and not replaced by new development—the narrative of retreat is unsupported.
5. The Press Release Claims Retreat Is Driven by “Vulnerability” — But Vulnerability Is Itself a Social, Not Climatic, Metric
From the authors:
“Coastal retreat mostly happens in places where communities don’t have the means to protect themselves… not necessarily because of more hazards.”
This is a revealing admission.
If retreat occurs not because hazards are increasing, but because:
- infrastructure is lacking,
- governments are limited in capacity,
- economies are weak,
…then the phenomenon is, by their own acknowledgment, a development issue, not a climate one.
In fact, this is exactly what historical settlement patterns show:
- Wealthier nations invest in sea walls, surge barriers, and coastal defenses.
- Poorer nations lack these resources and develop unevenly.
- Some regions urbanize inland because it is simply cheaper and less congested.
None of this indicates an accelerating climate-driven retreat.
6. The Claim That “56% of Regions Retreated” Requires Context the Study Doesn’t Provide
The press release claims:
“56% of coastal regions have retreated from the coast from 1992 to 2019.”
This is statistically meaningless without answers to the following:
1. What is the magnitude of the retreat?
A shift of 200 meters inland shows up in satellite light data, but is irrelevant to real-world settlement patterns.
2. What is the baseline distance?
If a region’s bright zone expanded inland due to suburbanization, but coastal density remained stable, that is not retreat.
3. Were coastal lights dimming, or inland lights brightening?
Uneven electrification alone can explain large portions of the “retreat.”
4. Are coastal populations declining?
The press release provides no evidence of shrinking populations—just shifts in illumination.
Without these details, the 56% figure tells us nothing about actual human movement.
7. Copenhagen “Moving Toward the Coast” Undermines the Claim That Hazards Are Increasing
The press release unintentionally highlights a contradiction:
“Denmark… is amongst the minority of regions moving closer to the coast these past decades.”
Denmark—a country with allegedly “accelerating sea-level rise”—is building closer to the water. So are the Netherlands, Singapore, Dubai, Tokyo, Miami, and New York.
When wealthier nations with access to the best data refuse to retreat from the coast, it reveals something important:
Their actions contradict the narrative of imminent climate-driven coastal uninhabitability.
People vote with their feet—and their mortgages.
8. The Real Drivers of Settlement Patterns Are Economics and Infrastructure, Not Climate Fear
Let’s spell out the well-known, empirically supported factors that drive modern settlement shifts:
1. Suburban expansion
As cities globalize, growth typically moves outward, not inward.
2. Rising coastal land prices
As wealthy areas densify, lower-income residents move slightly inland.
3. New transportation corridors
Roads, railways, and airports often spur inland development.
4. Industrial relocation
Factories and logistics hubs often move inland to cheaper land.
5. Electrification and grid expansion
Satellite sensors detect light, not humans.
None of these are climate phenomena. All are consistent with ordinary economic development.
Until the authors can demonstrate that humans are abandoning coastal areas because of climate fears—and not simply developing new land inland—the claimed “climate retreat” remains an assumption.
Conclusion: The Study’s Narrative Outpaces Its Evidence
The press release frames global settlement shifts as a climate adaptation story, but the underlying evidence appears far too thin to support that narrative.
To summarize the core problems:
- Developers don’t base decisions on climate risk—they base them on profit.
- Nightlight data is an unreliable proxy for population movement, especially across countries with uneven electrification.
- Historical population data shows long-term growth on coastlines.
- Economic expansion inland is not the same as retreat from the coast.
- The study itself admits that vulnerability—not hazard increase—is the key driver.
- Wealthy nations continue to build aggressively on coastlines, contradicting claims of climate-driven retreat.
The real story appears to be one of development patterns, not climate exodus.
The press release presents an alarming climate-driven narrative, but the evidence it cites actually points to something else entirely:
People are not fleeing coasts—coasts are evolving, developing, and in many places, thriving.
And until studies like this validate their satellite interpretations with real-world population and development data, claims of global “retreat” should be viewed with healthy skepticism.
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The westward expansion from the original 13 colonies was due to sea level rise
Sarc
This is rather like the old parable of the drunk looking for his keys next to the streetlight. What is easy is not necessarily useful.
The other side is really scraping the bottom of the barrel, losing is a hard thing.
The alarmists will continue grabbing for straws and they will never run out.
I saw this same paper at a different source back in September, probably doesn’t add much, but there you go.
https://phys.org/news/2025-09-world-coastal-settlements-retreating-seas.html
In Pacific Palisades, California many homeowners permanently retreated from their homes. Catastrophic global warming? No catastrophic fires and a government that won’t issue permits to rebuild.
Just as in Hawaii – as some crazy guys claimed back then after those strange fires that there will be no rebuild.(that’s actually not true as 3 homes were rebuild after 18 months and about 20 by now – those who don’t belong to the 1% and don’t have the convincing financial means to bypass bureaucracy and don’t know the governors in person will have to move on )
But the fire was a result of Climate Change.
My first thought was that if your town is on the coast then as it grows the centre of mass (or whatever) will move inland
Good observation Greg.
The number of roads that can actually be built along a coast are hmmm…one…
Plus, coastal construction has much stronger municipal rules about light pollution, and new LED streetlights have much improved light distribution downward in keeping with the overall desire to use less electricity….Trying to determine seashore erosion from lighting changes is simply dumb.
“Denmark—a country with allegedly “accelerating sea-level rise”
____________________________________________________
If you ask Google’s AI:
According to the PSMSL tide gauges,
what is the acceleration in the rate
of sea level rise since 1992?
Here’s what comes up:
According to analysis of global tide
gauge data from the Permanent Service
for Mean Sea Level (PSMSL), the acceleration
in the rate of global mean sea level
(GMSL) rise since the early 1990s has
been estimated to be approximately
0.013 mm/yr² to 0.0128 mm/yr².
Or about 0.01 mm/yr² Pretty in agreement with:
0.0001 mm is one tenth of a micron! That’s shorter than most IR wavelengths.
Damned accurate. I can’t measure sub-micron lengths easily, but I’m not a “climate scientist”. No problem for “climate scientists” measuring the ever-changing global ocean average distance from the center of the Earth – or maybe displacement from the ever changing geoid.
What a load of rubbish!
?? Where did you get the 0.0001mm from.. ?
FYI, the squared term refers to the “per year” part, as in mm/year/year… not to the number
I think maybe CO2 made Flynn’s thermometer hotter, and his brain flew the coop.
“Denmark—a country with allegedly “accelerating sea-level rise”
____________________________________________________
If you ask Google’s AI:
According to the PSMSL tide gauges,
what is the acceleration in the rate
of sea level rise since 1992?
You get:
According to analysis of global tide
gauge data from the Permanent Service
for Mean Sea Level (PSMSL), the acceleration
in the rate of global mean sea level
(GMSL) rise since the early 1990s has
been estimated to be approximately
0.013 mm/yr² to 0.0128 mm/yr².
Call it 0.01 mm/yr² pretty much like:
I only really know Sydney and Newcastle in NSW.
Sydney is jampacked on the ocean frontage, the only place for expansion is away from the coast, mostly to the southwest.
Newcastle has the same situation , except they are building 5 story hotels and swish residences along the harbour foreshore.
If you look at this video https://youtu.be/IFECisIO9Mk?t=373 , basically all those white 5-6 story blocks have been built in the last 10-20 years or even more recently..
Foreshore construction continues apace now that the railway corridor has been removed making access much easier.
Newcastle is basically “full” and very expensive…… and the major expansion zone are now around Maitland, a bit away from the coast, but with slightly more affordable housing !
Whatever nonsense they are going on about in this article is basically bovex of the highest order.
Many coastal communities are limiting outdoor lighting in order to limit the impact on sea turtles.
In other places, outdoor lighting is being limited because electricity has become a lot more expensive.
What are the margins of error for the three classes?
Are Copenhagen residents subject to lots of in-breeding? What an ignorant “study.” Sheesh.
Is the use of recreational drugs legal in Drnmarl?
The University of Copenhagen press release claiming that “over half of global coastal settlements are retreating inland due to intensifying climate risks . . .
No problem – “Quick! Run for the hills!”
Leave your keys. We’ll manage the inundated properties for you… 😜
The lights along to Florida coast are retreating due to sea turtle awareness.
Look, I live in North Central Massachusetts. I was pretty much promised my town would be a coastal town in the near future. that was 20 something years ago. That is why I chose to stay here! 🙂
Can’t you sue for lost income? Coastal real estate is generally more valuable, isn’t it.
Maybe you can at least get a refund for the wharf materials, the boathouse, and the yacht you bought in anticipation.
Can’t trust anybody, these days.
No actual proof that people are “fleeing” the coasts, just more lies.
Seems like the Obamas and the Kerrys haven’t gotten the message. Instead of listening to what these clowns say watch what they do. Actions speak louder than words.
Not sure where I read many years ago- that the earliest colonials in New England avoided living on the coast because of dangerous storms. So the idea that it’s only now becoming dangerous to live on the coast is absurd.
The Noth Carolina Outer Banks, which are sand bars that have been migrating westward for over a thousand years, went from very low population in the 1980s to highly developed currently. In Rodanthe and near Hatteras, a number of ocean-facing homes have collapsed into the Atlantic recently. The attribution to sea level rise and climate change ignores the fact that this process is a continuation of an ages-long migration of the sand bars. I love visiting the area, but sand nourishment and jetty construction won’t defeat Mother Nature. By the way, land costs and insurance have sky exploded over the period.
Don’t bother me with the facts.
Just tell me what slogan to repeat and where to go to join a protest.
/sarc
A much more reliable indicator would be whether real estate prices in coastal areas rise or fall. If people were fleeing the coast, prices would clearly drop, but I don’t think that’s the case.
In fact, many politicians, celebrities, etc. who talk about these catastrophes buy beachfront villas without the slightest concern.
In those decades many countries have imposed increasing distances from the coast for construction, due to laws protecting the coast and the environment. At least in Europe, but I imagine other continents as well.