Does Green Infrastructure Work? Precipitation, Protected Areas, Floods and Landslides

Peer Reviewed
10 August 2023

Economics of Disasters and Climate Change

We evaluate whether floods and landslides are more likely when rain falls inside versus outside protected areas (PAs).

Juan Robalino, Katrina Mullan, Matías Piaggio, Marisol Guzmán

We use monthly municipality data for the period 2000-2015 in Guatemala and monthly district data for the period 1992-2019 in Costa Rica. We define relevant catchment areas using water flows to the population centers of the administrative units. Then, we calculate the precipitation inside and outside Pas within the relevant catchment areas, and test how the frequency of floods and landslides is affected by whether rain falls inside or outside PAs. We use a two-way fixed-effects panel data model. For Guatemala, we find no robust statistically significant effects on these types of disasters. However, in Costa Rica, we find that shifts in precipitation towards PAs significantly reduce floods. These results are highly robust. We also find effects on landslides in densely populated districts as well as reduction in flood-related deaths. 

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Publication reference
Robalino, J., Mullan, K., Piaggio, M., & Guzmán, M. (2023). Does Green Infrastructure Work? Precipitation, Protected Areas, Floods and Landslides. Economics of Disasters and Climate Change, 7(3), 457–482. https://doi.org/10.1007/s41885-023-00134-0
Publication | 13 December 2023