2209190
Cooperative Agreement
Overview
Grant Description
Large-Scale COPE: Coastal Hazards, Equity, Economic Prosperity, and Resilience (CHEER) - Community resilience remains challenging to achieve in practice, in part due to constraints imposed by the parallel, and sometimes competing, objectives of equity and economic prosperity, particularly in the context of climate change.
To address this challenge, the hub research goals are to:
(1) Identify, explain, and quantify interactions and tradeoffs among the coastal community goals of equity, economic prosperity, and resilience to hazards.
(2) Develop methods to model long-term hurricane hazards that account for climate change and integrate multiple hazards - wind, rain, storm surge, waves.
(3) Develop a computational framework to design and evaluate policy interventions that can achieve sustainable equity, economic prosperity, and coastal resilience in the context of climate change.
The new dynamic and spatial computational framework will consist of seven interacting modules describing the interactive decision-making of three stakeholder types - households, insurers, and three levels of government - and the natural, built, and economic environments in which those decisions are made - hazards, damage/loss, buildings, and economy.
The framework results will include:
(A) Recommended government policies designed with an awareness of how insurers and households are likely to respond.
(B) Outcomes for each stakeholder type, including uncertainty and heterogeneity within them.
(C) Based on those stakeholder-specific outcomes, assessments of community equity, economic prosperity, and resilience over time.
Hub research will focus on three case study areas - Eastern North Carolina; Port Arthur, TX; and Houston, TX. The computational framework will serve as the basis of a decision support tool, which will propel implementation of coastal resilience forward by addressing impediments that interactions with equity, economic prosperity, and climate change create, and capitalizing on the opportunities they present.
Close collaboration with practitioner and community partners will ensure the decision tool is useful to practitioners and advances the interests of communities. Just as the regional loss modeling framework provided a structure that has guided research for decades, the hub's framework can facilitate future interdisciplinary research that makes loss modeling dynamic and includes a rich representation of decision-making embedded in the relevant social and economic context.
More specific disciplinary advances include understanding how wind, rain, inland and coastal flooding hazards dynamically interact, including potential impacts under future climate scenarios; developing an automated, scalable method for creating a high-resolution, detailed inventory of residential buildings; enhancing understanding of hurricanes' effects on regional economies' evolution; modeling interactions among levels of government; operationalizing multiple concepts of equity and their implications; and expanding understanding of renters' and mobile home residents' experiences with risk and risk management.
The hub will implement a comprehensive, research-based mentoring program, including quick response fieldwork training, and will broaden participation of students through partnerships with the McNair Scholars Program and Bill Anderson Fund, national organizations supporting graduate students from underrepresented groups.
The hub will engage other researchers and the public through the development of discipline primers and DRC IT! modules; workshops within the case study communities; and the HurricON II conference. Partnerships with SimCenter, DesignSafe-CI, and the Disaster Research Center will help ensure sustainability.
This project is jointly funded by the Coastlines & People (COPE) program and the Established Program to Stimulate Competitive Research (EPSCoR). This award reflects NSF's statutory mission and has been deemed worthy of support through evaluation using the Foundation's intellectual merit and broader impacts review criteria.
To address this challenge, the hub research goals are to:
(1) Identify, explain, and quantify interactions and tradeoffs among the coastal community goals of equity, economic prosperity, and resilience to hazards.
(2) Develop methods to model long-term hurricane hazards that account for climate change and integrate multiple hazards - wind, rain, storm surge, waves.
(3) Develop a computational framework to design and evaluate policy interventions that can achieve sustainable equity, economic prosperity, and coastal resilience in the context of climate change.
The new dynamic and spatial computational framework will consist of seven interacting modules describing the interactive decision-making of three stakeholder types - households, insurers, and three levels of government - and the natural, built, and economic environments in which those decisions are made - hazards, damage/loss, buildings, and economy.
The framework results will include:
(A) Recommended government policies designed with an awareness of how insurers and households are likely to respond.
(B) Outcomes for each stakeholder type, including uncertainty and heterogeneity within them.
(C) Based on those stakeholder-specific outcomes, assessments of community equity, economic prosperity, and resilience over time.
Hub research will focus on three case study areas - Eastern North Carolina; Port Arthur, TX; and Houston, TX. The computational framework will serve as the basis of a decision support tool, which will propel implementation of coastal resilience forward by addressing impediments that interactions with equity, economic prosperity, and climate change create, and capitalizing on the opportunities they present.
Close collaboration with practitioner and community partners will ensure the decision tool is useful to practitioners and advances the interests of communities. Just as the regional loss modeling framework provided a structure that has guided research for decades, the hub's framework can facilitate future interdisciplinary research that makes loss modeling dynamic and includes a rich representation of decision-making embedded in the relevant social and economic context.
More specific disciplinary advances include understanding how wind, rain, inland and coastal flooding hazards dynamically interact, including potential impacts under future climate scenarios; developing an automated, scalable method for creating a high-resolution, detailed inventory of residential buildings; enhancing understanding of hurricanes' effects on regional economies' evolution; modeling interactions among levels of government; operationalizing multiple concepts of equity and their implications; and expanding understanding of renters' and mobile home residents' experiences with risk and risk management.
The hub will implement a comprehensive, research-based mentoring program, including quick response fieldwork training, and will broaden participation of students through partnerships with the McNair Scholars Program and Bill Anderson Fund, national organizations supporting graduate students from underrepresented groups.
The hub will engage other researchers and the public through the development of discipline primers and DRC IT! modules; workshops within the case study communities; and the HurricON II conference. Partnerships with SimCenter, DesignSafe-CI, and the Disaster Research Center will help ensure sustainability.
This project is jointly funded by the Coastlines & People (COPE) program and the Established Program to Stimulate Competitive Research (EPSCoR). This award reflects NSF's statutory mission and has been deemed worthy of support through evaluation using the Foundation's intellectual merit and broader impacts review criteria.
Awardee
Funding Goals
THE GOAL OF THIS FUNDING OPPORTUNITY, "COASTLINES AND PEOPLE", IS IDENTIFIED IN THE LINK: HTTPS://WWW.NSF.GOV/PUBLICATIONS/PUB_SUMM.JSP?ODS_KEY=NSF21613
Grant Program (CFDA)
Awarding Agency
Funding Agency
Place of Performance
Newark,
Delaware
19716-0099
United States
Geographic Scope
Single Zip Code
Related Opportunity
Analysis Notes
Amendment Since initial award the total obligations have increased 849% from $1,750,000 to $16,605,009.
University Of Delaware was awarded
CHEER: Coastal Resilience for Equity, Economic Prosperity, and Hazards
Cooperative Agreement 2209190
worth $16,605,009
from the NSF Office of Integrative Activities in September 2022 with work to be completed primarily in Newark Delaware United States.
The grant
has a duration of 5 years and
was awarded through assistance program 47.050 Geosciences.
The Cooperative Agreement was awarded through grant opportunity Coastlines and People Hubs for Research and Broadening Participation.
Status
(Ongoing)
Last Modified 9/10/25
Period of Performance
9/1/22
Start Date
8/31/27
End Date
Funding Split
$16.6M
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$16.6M
Total Obligated
Activity Timeline
Subgrant Awards
Disclosed subgrants for 2209190
Transaction History
Modifications to 2209190
Additional Detail
Award ID FAIN
2209190
SAI Number
None
Award ID URI
SAI EXEMPT
Awardee Classifications
Public/State Controlled Institution Of Higher Education
Awarding Office
490604 DIVISION OF OCEAN SCIENCES
Funding Office
490601 INTEGRATIVE AND COLLABORATIVE
Awardee UEI
T72NHKM259N3
Awardee CAGE
015X1
Performance District
DE-00
Senators
Thomas Carper
Christopher Coons
Christopher Coons
Budget Funding
| Federal Account | Budget Subfunction | Object Class | Total | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Research and Related Activities, National Science Foundation (049-0100) | General science and basic research | Grants, subsidies, and contributions (41.0) | $10,764,955 | 100% |
Modified: 9/10/25