Report: New Jersey’s Rising Seas and Changing Coastal Storms

November 17, 2025

New Jersey’s Rising Seas and Changing Coastal Storms: Report of the 2025 Science and Technical Advisory Panel

Read Report

Abstract

The 2025 STAP Report represents the findings of the third New Jersey Science and Technical Advisory Panel on Sea-Level Rise and Coastal Storms (STAP). The STAP was charged with identifying, evaluating, and summarizing the most current science on sea-level change (i.e., historic sea-level rise and projections of future sea-level rise) and changing coastal storms. The 17 expert members of the STAP convened between November 2024 and September 2025 to draft this report and revise it in response to independent review by four peer experts and feedback on its usability from a panel of practitioners. As with previous STAP reports, this report aims to be policy-relevant, not policy-prescriptive. The report does not make recommendations about how decision makers should use projections. Such selections depend upon value judgments, such as the level of risk decision makers and impacted communities are willing to accept when planning their long-term resilience goals, as well as how decision makers and impacted communities choose to trade off the near-term costs of risk reduction and long-term sea-level risk. The STAP recommends that scientists and practitioners review the estimates and information herein on a regular basis, not to exceed five years, including after the publication of any major global (e.g., Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) or national (e.g., National Climate Assessment) assessments related to sea-level rise and coastal storms relevant to New Jersey.

This report was authored by 32 experts, many of whom work for the Center for Urban Policy Research

Citation

Kopp, R. E., A. Broccoli, G. Carleton, S. Dangendorf, R. DeConto, R. Frederiks, A.J. Garner, E. Grover-Kopec, L. Haaf, B. Hamlington, N. Ling, J. Lorenzo-Trueba, J. Miller, D. Robinson, G. Vecchi, T. Wahl, J. Walker, J.M. Barr, J. Shope, D.K. Apoznanski, P. Kumar, L. Marxen, A. Spector, K. O’Neill, L. Auermuller, and M. Kaplan. New Jersey’s Rising Seas and Changing Coastal Storms: Report of the 2025 Science and Technical Advisory Panel. Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey. Prepared for the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection. Trenton, New Jersey.

 

Recent Posts

Heldrich Center: Updated Multi-State Postsecondary Report Released

The Heldrich Center for Workforce Development has announced the release of an updated Multi-State Postsecondary Report, linking postsecondary completion data to employment outcomes across Kentucky, New Jersey, Ohio, Rhode Island, Tennessee, and Virginia. This effort...

Cantor, Yedidia Identify Strategies to Provide Health Care to Homeless

Through cooperation, homeless services and health care providers can improve delivery of medical care to a vulnerable population, according to Rutgers researchers published by Rutgers Today, December 17, 2025 Author: Greg Bruno Media Contact: Nicole Swenarton, Rutgers...

“Work Trends RU” Podcast with Beth Simone Noveck, Ph.D.

Beth Simone Noveck, Ph.D., Chief AI Strategist for the State of New Jersey, Guests on Work Trends RU Podcast Listen to the latest episode of the Heldrich Center’s “Work Trends RU” podcast, featuring Beth Simone Noveck, Ph.D., Chief AI Strategist for the State of New...

Prof. Andrews Interviewed About New Jersey’s Propane Emergency

RINGWOOD, N.J. (PIX11) — It’s a phrase that brings to mind natural disasters, like hurricanes or blizzards, but a state of emergency has now gone into effect in New Jersey over propane deliveries. As is the case in most natural disasters, this state of emergency...

Pfeiffer Ranks on List for Local Political Influence (Daily Targum)

By Daniel Ovadia Dec. 9, 2025, 8:04 p.m. Marc Pfeiffer, a senior policy fellow and associate director of Bloustein Local — a unit of Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy's Center for Urban Policy Development — was recently ranked on the Insider 100...