Rising sea levels, intensifying storms and accelerating coastal development are placing unprecedented pressure on already modified shorelines. Engineered structures such as seawalls and breakwaters now dominate many urban waterfronts and roughly one-third of the world’s sandy coastline has been hardened. In many cities, hard infrastructure has become the default response to coastal risk.
This reliance on hard infrastructure provides essential protection for coastal communities and assets. Conventional armouring reduces erosion, buffers storm surge and stabilises valuable land. However, this protection comes at an ecological cost.
Evidence from seawalls, one of the most common forms of coastal defence, illustrates the impact. Compared with natural shorelines, they support 23 percent lower biodiversity and 45 percent fewer organisms. Over time, hardened coastal infrastructure reshapes ecosystems, simplifying environments that were once structurally complex and biologically rich.
Coastal protection and ecological outcomes are often treated as competing objectives, with safety prioritised over nature. However, this tension is not inherent to coastal defence. In many cases, it reflects how shoreline protection has traditionally been designed.
Research increasingly suggests that this trade-off is not inevitable. Eco-engineering introduces modest design enhancements that retain protective function while restoring ecological complexity.
A global review of 160 marine eco-engineering interventions found strong and increasing evidence of impact, with nearly 90 percent reporting positive ecological outcomes, including greater species abundance and richness. In urbanised marine environments, eco-engineering is emerging as a practical, design-led way to deliver both coastal resilience and biodiversity outcomes.
As climate risk accelerates and shorelines continue to urbanise, these findings have important implications for coastal infrastructure design. The challenge now is to move beyond conventional armouring and design coastal infrastructure that supports both protective and ecological functions.