“…Despite ample evidence of the significant limitations of global DEMs, especially SRTM, for coastal assessments, they have been used extensively for mapping and describing potential impacts of SLR and coastal flooding, often with assessment parameters (small water level increments and short planning horizons) that fall well within the error bounds of the underlying elevation data (Dasgupta et al, 2008(Dasgupta et al, , 2010Hanson et al, 2010;Curtis and Schneider, 2011;Blankespoor et al, 2014;Hardy and Nuse, 2016;Kopp et al, 2017;Runting et al, 2017;Brown et al, 2018a,b;Gebremichael et al, 2018;Haer et al, 2018;Jevrejeva et al, 2018;Lincke and Hinkel, 2018;Nicholls et al, 2018;Prahl et al, 2018;Rasmussen et al, 2018;Schuerch et al, 2018;Wolff et al, 2018). Some of these studies used a model or database in which the global DEM is embedded, such as the Dynamic Interactive Vulnerability Assessment (DIVA) modeling framework (Hinkel, 2005;Vafeidis et al, 2008), so the inherent vertical uncertainty is contained within model or database components.…”