Call & Times

Boston Harbor barrier estimated at $12 billion

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BOSTON (AP) — A harbor barrier to protect Boston from rising seas and increased flooding due to climate change could cost nearly $12 billion and take more than 30 years to complete, according to a new analysis from the University of Massachuse­tts-Boston.

The researcher­s cautioned city leaders from pursuing the barrier idea. Instead, they recommende­d the city continue to make investment­s in relatively cheaper and quicker “shore-based” protection­s, such as temporary flood walls and berms that already are being tried in some low-lying neighborho­ods.

Boston could revisit the barrier idea in a few decades, when the impacts of those cheaper alternativ­es could be measured and technologi­cal advances might make a harborwide barrier more feasible, Paul Kirshen, the UMass-Boston professor who led the project, said in an interview ahead of the report’s release Wednesday.

“We’re confident that shore-based solutions can get us through to 2070 or 2080,” he said. “So the earliest we might need a barrier system is near the end of the century.”

The report is being released as part of “Boston Harbor for All,” a summit focused on protecting Boston’s booming harborfron­t from the impact of climate change. The study was prompted by the city’s 2016 Climate Ready Boston report, which recommende­d studying the feasibilit­y of a harbor barrier to protect the city from coastal flooding.

The team, which also included researcher­s from the Woods Hole Oceanograp­hic Institutio­n and other organizati­ons, looked at two possible designs for a gated harbor barrier.

The smallest would run about 1 mile (1.6 kilometers) from Logan Internatio­nal Airport to the Seaport area of South Boston and cost about $6.5 billion to $8.7 billion.

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