Washington D.C. - Nearly 4 million people across the United States, from Los
Angeles to much of the East Coast, live in homes more prone to flooding
from rising seas fueled by global warming, according to a new method of
looking at flood risk published in two scientific papers.
The
cities that have the most people living within three feet (one meter)
of high tide — the projected sea level rise by the year 2100 made by
many scientists and computer models — are in Florida, Louisiana, and New
York. New York City, often not thought of as a city prone to flooding,
has 141,000 people at risk, which is second only to New Orleans'
284,000. The two big Southeast Florida counties, Miami-Dade and Broward,
have 312,000 people at risk combined.
All
told, 3.7 million people live in homes within three feet of high tide.
More than 500 US cities have at least 10 percent of the population at
increased risk, the studies said.
"Southeast
Florida is definitely the highest density of population that's really
on low coastal land that's really most at risk," said lead author Ben
Strauss, a scientist at Climate Central. Climate Central is a New
Jersey-based group of scientists and journalists who do research about
climate change.
The
studies look at people who live in homes within three feet of high
tide, whereas old studies looked just at elevation above sea level,
according to work published Thursday in the peer-reviewed journal
Environmental Research and an accompanying report by Climate Central.
That's an important distinction because using high tide is more accurate
for flooding impacts, said study co-author Jonathan Overpeck, a
scientist at the University of Arizona's Institute of the Environment.
And when the new way of looking at risk is factored in, the outlook
looks worse, Overpeck said.
"It's
shocking to see how large the impacts could be, particularly in
southern Florida and Louisiana, but much of the coastal U.S. will share
in the serious pain," Overpeck said.
And
it's not just residents of coastal areas who will be hurt by this, said
Sharlene Leurig, a senior manager for the insurance program at Ceres, a
Boston-based investment network. Most coastal areas get flood insurance
from the federal program and with more flooding, the program will have
to spend more and that will come out of all taxpayers' wallets, she
said.
Sea
level has already risen about 8 inches since 1880 because warmer waters
expand, Strauss said. In addition to the basic physics of ever-warming
water expanding, scientist say hotter climate will cause some melting of
glaciers in Greenland and western Antarctica that would then cause seas
to rise even more.
Flooding
from Hurricane Irene last year illustrated how vulnerable coastal
places such as Manhattan are with a combination of storms and sea level
rise, Strauss said.
Using
data from the latest census, Climate Central also has developed an
interactive system that allows people to check their risk by entering a
ZIP code.
Sea
level rise experts at the U.S. Geological Survey and the National
Oceanic Atmospheric Administration who weren't part of the studies said
the results make sense and were done by experts in the field.
"All
low elevation places in the many urban areas along the coast will
become more vulnerable," said S. Jeffress Williams, scientist emeritus
for the USGS, who wasn't part of the studies. He pointed to Boston, New
York City, Norfolk, Va., New Orleans, Charleston, S.C., Miami and
Washington and its Virginia suburbs. "More people and infrastructure
will be at increasing risk of flooding."
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