Current:Home > FinanceSinking Coastal Lands Will Exacerbate the Flooding from Sea Level Rise in 24 US Cities, New Research Shows-LoTradeCoin
Sinking Coastal Lands Will Exacerbate the Flooding from Sea Level Rise in 24 US Cities, New Research Shows
View Date:2024-12-23 23:15:14
Flooding could affect one out of every 50 residents in 24 coastal cities in the United States by the year 2050, a study led by Virginia Tech researchers suggests.
The study, published this month in Nature, shows how the combination of land subsidence—in this case, the sinking of shoreline terrain—and rising sea levels can lead to the flooding of coastal areas sooner than previously anticipated by research that had focused primarily on sea level rise scenarios.
“One of the things we wanted to do with this study is really emphasize the impact of land subsidence, which is often not reflected in most of the discussion around sea level rise,” said Leonard Ohenhen, the lead author of the study and a graduate student at Virginia Tech’s Earth Observation and Innovation Lab.
The study combines measurements of land subsidence obtained from satellites with sea level rise projections and tide charts, offering a more holistic projection of potential flooding risks in 32 cities located along the Atlantic, Pacific and Gulf coasts.
The satellites bounce signals off the Earth and measure the time it takes for them to return, allowing the researchers to determine whether the distance between the ground and the satellites is increasing or decreasing. Less distance between the ground and the satellites would mean that the land is rising, while increases in that distance would show that the land is sinking.
The study found that out of the 32 coastal cities examined, 24 are sinking more than 2 millimeters per year. Half of these cities have specific areas that are sinking faster than the global sea levels are rising.
Up to 500,000 individuals living in these regions may be impacted in the next 30 years, with potentially one in every 35 private properties facing flooding damages.
We’re hiring!
Please take a look at the new openings in our newsroom.
See jobsMost conversations around climate change impacts involve projections for the end of the century, Ohenhen said. The team’s goal with this study was to look at the short term and show the existing hazards.
“We tend to think of the consequences of climate change as a long term effect,” he said. “Which makes people feel like you cannot really account for all of the changes or the things that will happen before that time. And that often leads to under preparation.”
The year 2050, often cited in climate discussions, is not an end point but rather a marker of the immediacy of the issue, said Robert Nicholls, director of the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research and professor at the University of East Anglia in the U.K., who was a contributing author to the study.
The research anticipates that the 32 cities under consideration will collectively house approximately 25 million people and 10 million properties by 2050. It found ethnic minorities, especially in the Gulf Coast region, could face disproportionate impacts.
Minorities constitute roughly 43 percent of the population in the 11 Gulf Coast cities the study includes. However, they are expected to represent between 64 to 72 percent of the population at risk of flooding by 2050, the research shows. African Americans, in particular, are projected to make up over half of this vulnerable population.
The first step in tackling the challenge of flooding isn’t necessarily adaptation, but rather recognizing that it’s a problem, said Nicholls.
“It’s really a wake up call to think about how we’re going to live with this changing interface between the land and the sea,” Nicholls said of the study.
Structural adaptation strategies vary widely, from building protective walls to raising buildings on stilts or elevated mounds of earth, a more common practice in many areas of the U.S., Nicholls said. These strategies can help protect properties from flooding.
Natural habitats and coastal ecosystems have some degree of protection against sea level rise hazards, but they won’t protect communities from all of the challenges that sea level rise could pose, Siddharth Narayan, an assistant professor at East Carolina University, said.
“So it’s going to be a combination of long-term structural adaptations and solutions wherever possible and conserving and maintaining our natural spaces to add a little bit of a buffer,” Narayan said.
Marsh restoration, coral reefs and dunes can provide a natural barrier, said Andra Garner, an assistant professor at Rowan University.
It’s still uncertain what sea level rise impacts might look like in the future, Garner said. That uncertainty, she said, comes from a lot of places—including human behavior.
Garner was the lead author of a 2023 study published in Earth’s Future, which surveyed 54 coastal locations in the U.S. and found that more than half underestimated the future sea level rise projections by the U.N.’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).
“It’s important that these communities that are at risk really are using the tools available to try to plan for sea level rise and to be working towards solutions that can benefit those that are exposed,” Garner said.
Share this article
veryGood! (51583)
Related
- College football Week 12 expert picks for every Top 25 game include SEC showdowns
- Jennifer Coolidge’s Dream Marvel Superpower Will (Literally) Blow You Away
- 'It's not over yet': Artists work to keep Iran's protests in view
- Musician Ben Kweller Mourns Death of 16-Year-Old Son Dorian
- 2025 NFL Draft order: Updated first round picks after Week 10 games
- China says U.S.-U.K.-Australia nuclear submarine deal puts allies on path of error and danger
- U.K. plan to cut asylum seeker illegal arrivals draws U.N. rebuke as critics call it morally repugnant
- Gen Z's Favorite Underwear Brand Dropped a Size-Inclusive, Comfortable Bra Collection
- One person is dead after a shooting at Tuskegee University
- Everything Our Shopping Editors Would Buy From Ulta With $100
Ranking
- The 15 quickest pickup trucks MotorTrend has ever tested
- 'Mission: Impossible' is back, but will you accept it, or will it self-destruct?
- Ashley Park Reveals What It’s Like Working With Selena Gomez on Only Murders in the Building
- Headed Towards a Tropical Beach Destination for Spring Break? Here's What to Pack
- ‘COP Fatigue’: Experts Warn That Size and Spectacle of Global Climate Summit Is Hindering Progress
- 'Crook Manifesto' takes Colson Whitehead's heist hero in search of Jackson 5 tickets
- Las Vegas police investigating Tupac Shakur's 1996 murder have searched a Nevada home
- The Sweet Ways Heather Rae and Tarek El Moussa Celebrated One Month With Son Tristan
Recommendation
-
Glen Powell responds to rumor that he could replace Tom Cruise in 'Mission: Impossible'
-
A Type-A teen and a spontaneous royal outrun chaos in 'The Prince & The Apocalypse'
-
A Shopping Editor's Must-Haves Under $55 From Kim Kardashian's SKIMS
-
Jane Birkin, British actress, singer and French icon, dies at 76
-
Let Demi Moore’s Iconic Fashion Give You More Inspiration
-
Russia fires hypersonic missiles in latest Ukraine attack as war in east drives elderly holdouts into a basement
-
Broadway lyricist Sheldon Harnick, who wrote 'Fiddler on the Roof,' dies at 99
-
Jeremy Renner Shares Physical and Mental Health Update 2 Months After Snowplow Accident