General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsUS coasts face a crisis as land sinks and seas rise
A slow-moving crisis of sinking land and rising water is playing out along America's coastline.
In the past 100 years, sea levels have climbed about a foot or more in some U.S. cities 11 inches in New York and Boston, 12 in Charleston, S.C., 16 in Atlantic City, 18 in Norfolk, Virginia, and 25 in Galveston, Texas, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration..
Seas are forecast to rise from 8 inches to 23 inches along the nations coasts by 2050, with the higher increases along the northern Gulf Coast and mid-Atlantic. Every inch of additional water is expected to move farther inland making flood events worse and putting more properties at risk.
Meanwhile, in many coastal areas, the land is sinking, making flooding an even greater issue.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/weather/topstories/us-coasts-face-a-crisis-as-land-sinks-and-seas-rise/ar-AA1FqVcE
How's Mierda A Lardo doing?

quaint
(3,856 posts)brush
(59,977 posts)when it gets really bad. trump is such a moron, doesn't he know MAL is on the Florida coast, one of the most affected areas?
czarjak
(12,827 posts)Conveniently discarded.
TnDem
(844 posts)Don't buy a waterfront home in Galveston Texas before 2050.
misanthrope
(8,780 posts)Anywhere, any time. Insurance rates aren't going to come down and the increase in atmospheric energy is going to make things dicey.
FakeNoose
(37,426 posts)I'm happy to be living in Pittsburgh where we don't have any of that.
misanthrope
(8,780 posts)Won't increased precipitation bring greater issues with flooding?
FakeNoose
(37,426 posts)The last one I remember in Pittsburgh was in the mid-90s. We have a system of dams and levees that control most of it. You might be thinking of Johnstown, PA where they've had a few catastrophic floods.
JustABozoOnThisBus
(24,144 posts)Right now, there is concern that the water levels are low. Boat propeller repair shops are looking forward to a good year.
Are those three rivers consistent in their channels, no floods?
FakeNoose
(37,426 posts)The big rivers - the Monongahela, the Allegheny and the Ohio - are normally controlled by dams and levees. The last flood we had in Pittsburgh was in 1995 that I can remember. Floodwater came as high as the parking lot at Three Rivers Stadium, but then it receded. It happened on account of an ice jam on the Ohio River and everything backed up. But that was kind of a fluke.
ananda
(31,821 posts)along with lots of other places.
KentuckyWoman
(6,998 posts)Even if we aren't going to care about other countries, the impact to the US of A is significant. Florida alone has 16 M people that are impacted. And Florida is basically just a big sandbar that the ocean wants back.
Hey Joe
(14 posts)Florida is more like a coral reef just a few feet above sea level. Dig a hole anywhere in southern Florida and you wont get very deep before you hit limestone.
Saltwater intrusion is also a problem which will increase with the higher sea levels.
So glad I left that area thirty years ago! You couldnt pay me to move back there.