Initially, PROGEP activities focused on carrying out studies, notably on the evolution of the coastal zone of Saint Louis, as well as on the development of decision-making tools to support the revision and extension of the Urban Master Plan (PDU).
Following the regular flooding of the Langue de Barbarie, the World Bank, with the support of the government, launched the Saint-Louis Emergency Recovery and Resilience Project (SERRP), which provided for the construction of protection works and the implementation of emergency and temporary rehousing measures.
Five adaptation scenarios were studied and budgeted to provide long-term solutions to the communities. It was decided to leave the breach open-ended and to relocate communities permanently to a neighbouring municipality, Gandon, in combination with temporary measures involving beach nourishment and the construction of a seawall. The managed retreat was therefore decided on for a strip 20 metres wide and 3.6 kilometres long, requiring the relocation of around 15,000 people.