The Jersey Shore is one of New Jersey’s most treasured assets — a place where families vacation, businesses thrive, and communities live with a deep connection to the coast. But as climate change continues to reshape our world, the shore faces an escalating challenge: how to protect its fragile coastlines from rising seas and stronger storms while managing the skyrocketing costs of doing so.
In a special encore presentation, NJ Spotlight News revisits the documentary Paradox: Rising Water and Mounting Costs, a hard look at the financial and environmental challenges now defining the Jersey Shore. For residents, policymakers, and visitors alike, the paradox is clear: protecting the shore has never been more necessary, but the cost of those protections grows higher each year.

Why the Jersey Shore Matters
The Jersey Shore is more than just a summer getaway. It’s a critical piece of New Jersey’s economic engine, driving billions of dollars annually through tourism, hospitality, real estate, and small businesses. Every summer, millions of visitors flock to towns like Point Pleasant, Cape May, and Asbury Park, creating jobs and supporting local economies that rely heavily on seasonal revenue.
But the same waters that make the Shore so attractive are also its greatest threat. Rising sea levels and coastal flooding have already reshaped parts of the coastline, and the risks are mounting with each passing year.
Climate Change and Rising Seas
Climate change is no longer a distant forecast; it’s a present-day reality for the Jersey Shore. Sea levels along the Mid-Atlantic coast are rising faster than the global average, while storms are becoming stronger and more destructive.
Communities are already feeling the impacts:
- High-tide flooding now disrupts daily life, damaging infrastructure and straining local budgets.
- Superstorm Sandy, still fresh in the collective memory, revealed how quickly entire towns can be brought to a standstill.
- Shoreline erosion is reshaping beaches that residents and visitors have cherished for generations.
This combination of threats underscores why protection efforts are so critical — and so costly.
The Cost of Defending the Shore
Protecting the Jersey Shore isn’t as simple as piling up sand. It requires massive investments in:
- Beach Renourishment Projects: Pumping sand to restore eroded beaches is essential for storm defense, but it comes at a steep price. These projects must often be repeated every few years, multiplying costs over time.
- Dune Construction and Maintenance: Dunes are vital barriers against storm surge, but building and maintaining them requires both funding and cooperation from local communities.
- Infrastructure Reinforcement: Roads, bridges, and drainage systems all need upgrades to withstand frequent flooding and saltwater damage.
As climate risks increase, so too do the price tags for these projects. This is the central paradox: the more climate change advances, the more expensive it becomes to protect the very areas being impacted.
Funding Challenges
The financial burden of coastal defense is spread across local, state, and federal governments, as well as residents themselves. Questions remain over who should pay — and how much.
- Federal dollars often fund large-scale renourishment and dune projects, but securing those funds can be a political battle.
- Local taxpayers bear the costs of recurring flooding and insurance premiums, straining households already facing rising living costs.
- State officials must balance the Shore’s needs against other pressing infrastructure challenges across New Jersey.
For many coastal residents, this means paying more to live with the constant risk of flooding, while knowing that the next major storm could erase decades of progress.
Communities on the Front Line
While much of the conversation revolves around economics and policy, the reality is deeply personal for Shore residents. Families face flooded streets during “sunny day” high tides. Business owners worry about the long-term future of their investments. And communities continue to rebuild after devastating storms, often with the awareness that future damage may be unavoidable.
At the same time, there is resilience. Local organizations, community leaders, and environmental groups are working together to advocate for sustainable solutions that balance economic vitality with environmental protection.
The True Paradox
The documentary’s title — Paradox: Rising Water and Mounting Costs — captures the essence of this struggle. New Jersey must invest heavily in defenses to keep the Jersey Shore open, safe, and thriving. Yet, as sea levels rise and storms intensify, those very defenses demand greater investment, creating a cycle that is as financially draining as it is necessary.
The Shore is both New Jersey’s economic jewel and its most vulnerable frontier. Protecting it is a responsibility that comes with no easy answers, only difficult choices and ever-growing costs.
Looking Ahead
The future of the Jersey Shore depends on innovation, cooperation, and long-term planning. From new engineering solutions to improved climate resilience strategies, New Jersey’s ability to adapt will determine whether the Shore remains a vibrant hub for generations to come.
For now, the paradox remains: the more we need to protect the shore, the more expensive that protection becomes. What’s at stake is not just beachfront property, but the very identity of the Garden State’s coast.
Explore more on the challenges and future of the Jersey Shore.