Current:Home > StocksPowerful Winter Storm Shows Damage High Tides With Sea Level Rise Can Do -GrowthInsight
Powerful Winter Storm Shows Damage High Tides With Sea Level Rise Can Do
View
Date:2025-04-16 04:08:34
Stay informed about the latest climate, energy and environmental justice news by email. Sign up for the ICN newsletter.
With two powerful storms generating record high tides that inundated parts of the Atlantic Coast just weeks apart—and a third nor’easter on its way—environmental advocates are urging greater efforts to address climate change and adapt cities to sea level rise.
The governors of Massachusetts, Maryland, New York and Virginia declared states of emergency as high tides and hurricane force winds ravaged the Eastern Seaboard last week raising concerns about coastal infrastructure damage and beach erosion as far south as North Carolina’s Outer Banks.
On Friday, Boston experienced its third-highest high tide since record keeping began in 1928, with waters just inches below the record of 15.16 feet set on Jan. 4, during the city’s last major winter storm.
The National Guard rescued more than 100 people from rising tides in nearby Quincy. Waves lashed three-story homes in Scituate, Massachusetts, and high tides washed over a bridge near Portland, Maine.
Hundreds of thousands of homes across the Mid-Atlantic and New England remained without power on Monday, and much of Long Island continued to experience coastal flooding as the region braced for another powerful storm forecast for Wednesday.
“It’s given the region a very stark picture of what climate change looks like and a reminder of the urgency of changing, not just our energy platform, but also our building and development practices,” said Bradley Campbell, president of the Conservation Law Foundation, a Boston-based environmental advocacy group.
“There is roughly $6 billion of construction planned or occurring in Boston’s Seaport District, known as the ‘innovation district’, but in fact it’s the ‘inundation district,’ and very little of that construction is designed to contend with climate conditions that are already here let alone those that lie in the near future,” Campbell said.
As the planet warms, scientists say cities will need to play an increasingly active role in both reducing greenhouse gas emissions and adapting to a changing climate.
“Conventional urban planning approaches and capacity-building strategies to tackle increasing vulnerability to extreme events and growing demands for a transition to a low-carbon economy are proving inadequate,” researchers wrote in a policy paper published Feb. 27 in the journal Nature Climate Change. “These efforts must now shift to hyper-speed.”
One possible solution now being considered to protect Boston—where the city’s latest outlook says sea level rose about 9 inches during the last century and could rise 1.5 feet in the first half of this century—is the construction of a massive barrier across Boston harbor with gates that close to protect the region from storm surges. The project would likely cost billions of dollars to complete, money that Campbell said could be better spent on other solutions.
“There isn’t a wall that is going to be effective to protect all of the New England coastal areas that are at risk,” he said. “We are going to have much more cost-effective solutions by improvements of design, by incorporating the need for sacrificial and buffer areas into design, and by updating standards for storm water management and runoff.”
veryGood! (64788)
Related
- Your Wedding Guests Will Thank You if You Get Married at These All-Inclusive Resorts
- Transcript: Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell on Face the Nation, April 28, 2024
- Columbia protest faces 2 p.m. deadline; faculty members 'stand' with students: Live updates
- 2 hikers drown after falling into creek on Tennessee trail
- Olympic men's basketball bracket: Results of the 5x5 tournament
- Who wants to be a millionaire? How your IRA can help you get there
- Clippers blow 31-point lead before holding on to edge Mavericks in wild Game 4
- Looking back: Mage won 2023 Kentucky Derby on day marred by death of two horses
- Residents in Alaska capital clean up swamped homes after an ice dam burst and unleashed a flood
- University of Arizona student shot to death at off-campus house party
Ranking
- American news website Axios laying off dozens of employees
- With the 2024 NFL draft in the rearview mirror, these 6 teams have big needs to address
- Missing teen child of tech executives found safe in San Francisco, suspect in custody
- AIGM puts AI into Crypto security
- NCAA hits former Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh with suspension, show-cause for recruiting violations
- More than a dozen military families in Hawaii spark trial over 2021 jet fuel leak that tainted water
- Nicole Kidman and Keith Urban's Daughters Sunday and Faith Make Their Red Carpet Debut
- Mannequin falls onto track during IndyCar Grand Prix at Barber Motorsports Park
Recommendation
Illinois governor calls for resignation of sheriff whose deputy fatally shot Black woman in her home
AIGM puts AI into Crypto security
Scott McLaughlin wins at Barber after week of questions around Team Penske controversy
Zendaya breaks down her 'dream girl' dance scene in 'Challengers': 'It's hilarious'
Bodycam footage shows high
CDC: ‘Vampire facials’ at an unlicensed spa in New Mexico led to HIV infections in three women
Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Gotcha in the End
Tornadoes leave a trail of destruction in Oklahoma, communities begin to assess damage