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Rising Sea Levels Could Threaten 180 U.S. Cities By 2100

Sea Level

First Posted: 02/17/11 01:39 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:35 PM ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters/Deborah Zabarenko) - Rising seas spurred by climate change could threaten 180 U.S. coastal cities by 2100, a new study says, with Miami, New Orleans and Virginia Beach among those most severely affected.

Previous studies have looked at where rising waters might go by the end of this century, assuming various levels of sea level rise, but this latest research focused on municipalities in the contiguous 48 states with population of 50,000 or more.

Cities along the southern Atlantic coast and the Gulf of Mexico will likely be hardest hit if global sea levels rise, as projected, by about 3 feet (1 meter) by 2100, researchers reported in the journal Climate Change Letters.

Sea level rise is expected to be one result of global warming as ice on land melts and flows toward the world's oceans.

Using data from the U.S. Geological Survey, the scientists were able to calculate in detail how much land could be lost as seas rise, said study author Jeremy Weiss of the University of Arizona.

Rising coastal waters threaten an average of nine percent of the land in the 180 coastal cities in the study.

Miami, New Orleans, Tampa, Florida, and Virginia Beach, Virginia could lose more than 10 percent of their land area by century's end, the study found.

New York City, Washington DC and the San Francisco Bay area could face lesser impacts, according to the study.

CLIMATE CHANGE

The effects of higher seas can range from erosion to permanent inundation, and the severity of the damage depends in great measure on where the cities are, Weiss said by telephone on Wednesday.

"In Miami, it's not just strictly along their coastal edge. They have to worry about the issue in all directions," because much of the area around Miami is relatively flat, making it more vulnerable to encroaching waters, Weiss said.

By contrast, he said, people in the New York metropolitan area can concentrate their efforts along the shorelines because the land rises quickly away from the coast.

Sea level rise is expected as a consequence of continuing climate change, which is spurred by human activities including the burning of fossil fuels.

The U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change IPCC.L has estimated global average temperature will rise by 3.6 degrees F (2 degrees C) by 2100. However, Weiss and his colleagues put the warming at more like 8 degrees F (4.4 degrees C).

Weiss said the lesser degree of warming projected by the IPCC reflects a moderate scenario. The study's higher temperature estimate is based on the idea that greenhouse emissions will continue along the current trajectory through the century.

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.

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WASHINGTON (Reuters/Deborah Zabarenko) - Rising seas spurred by climate change could threaten 180 U.S. coastal cities by 2100, a new study says, with Miami, New Orleans and Virginia Beach among thos...
WASHINGTON (Reuters/Deborah Zabarenko) - Rising seas spurred by climate change could threaten 180 U.S. coastal cities by 2100, a new study says, with Miami, New Orleans and Virginia Beach among thos...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mdsmith013
student of the world
02:01 AM on 04/13/2011
And yet, the Chair of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce does not "believe" in climate change. Oh, Thomas Jefferson if you could see us now...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dragonmaster
04:33 PM on 03/14/2011
cities and towns along the Connecticut shoreline will see flooding and some submerging of their streets- the amount of course is what the rise will be. If its a meter rise there will be problems, more then three feet- bigger problems- with flooding of lowlands in the Connecticut river valley as far north as Hartford.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Cleo Creech
Atlanta writer, poet, activist.
07:36 PM on 02/24/2011
There's actually a pretty interesting google maps based program where you can put in various rises in sealevels (1 to 14 m) and see the effects. In the U.S. The keys disappear pretty quickly and the Gulf swamps the everglades all the way back up to Lake Okeechobee. Whole chunks of Eastern NC disappear. Expanded Delaware and Chesapeak Bays swallow up huge areas. On the West Coast San Francisco bay quickly floods all the way inland to Sacremento. The Gulf of California actually ends up extending well into CA all the way to Palm Springs.

Some other major changes around the world. The Atlantic floods well up into the Amazon Basin. Huge chunks of Eastern England go under water as far as most of the Netherlands. Venice Italy is gone. The Caspian Sea almost doubles in size.

And as you go from coast to coast the list of coastal capitals that are submerged is too long to list.

http://flood.firetree.net/?ll=43.3251,-101.6015&z=13&m=7
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JaxReader
Hear reason, or she'll make you feel her.
05:12 PM on 03/07/2011
Thanks for the link.

Note to self: Sell house before centuries end..
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Richard2
08:37 PM on 02/22/2011
Meanwhile the rate of sea level rise in Copenhagen, Denmark continues to register as about two inches per century. Even the Copenhagen Climate Conference couldn't provoke the sea to rise at a higher than normal rate.

Is Copenhagen considered to be a "threatened city?"
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Publicola
Reality has a scientific bias
02:20 AM on 02/25/2011
The "normal rate" of sea level rise over the 20th century was about a half-foot; the rate increased over more recent decades.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Richard2
09:04 PM on 02/21/2011
Well, what is the evidence for this? During the entire 20th Century, how many U.S. cities were threatened by rising sea levels?

This is a good "comp" for this prediction for the year 2100.

Or, how many U.S. cities were threatened by rising sea levels between the year 2000 and the year 2011? Can anyone name them?
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ILoveFiction
That's unbelievable!
08:35 AM on 02/22/2011
I just never know where you are going to go with your arguments.

You don't seem to know where you are going either 'cause you are trying to drive the buggy whilst sitting backwards on the bench.

Hope your horse likes you.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Richard2
05:09 PM on 02/23/2011
Humans have been studying the sea and sea level changes for a very long time. Humans have been taking detailed measurements of sea levels for more than a century. The most logical way to make a forecast of future sea level rise is to simply study the sea level rise that has occurred in the past, especially the very recent past.

The actual sea level rise the past ten years has either been very modest or has been a negative, as along the California coast. Any person making claims about what future sea levels will be 90 years from now should be required to first address and explain the recent historical record, and then to build a case for any radical divergence from the historical record. The above report ignores that historical record, and reaches conclusions that appear totally at odds with the historical record. Therefore it isn't credible.
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Publicola
Reality has a scientific bias
12:11 PM on 02/25/2011
The sea level rise over the 20th century was about a half-foot; the rate increased more over recent decades.

Which again is to say your claim Richard2 that the "above report ignores that historical record, and reaches conclusion­s that appear totally at odds with the historical record" not only isn't credible - it is false.
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Raccoon1
These are the times that try men's souls........
10:41 AM on 03/10/2011
We didn't have the rate of melt then as we do now. The Universe is not static.
07:13 PM on 02/21/2011
Oh, no!

Not the dreaded could!
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ILoveFiction
That's unbelievable!
08:01 PM on 02/21/2011
Could.

Could not.

Could.

Could not.

If you are attempting fiction, just pick whichever one sounds better.
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tooncesrocks
my micro bio is empty
08:33 PM on 02/20/2011
one thing... 180 isn't the #... it's 1,000s.

displacing the people in costal cities will impact everyone...
and of course all of the world's coastline will become mud, garbage, litter, underwater buildings... aka totally unusable dangerous death traps. What this will do to world shipping & transport... not good.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Richard2
08:56 PM on 02/21/2011
Can anyone report what the total number of people displaced by rising sea levels during the 20th Century was? Were there any?
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DocSkull
My questions aren't rhetorical.
09:43 PM on 02/21/2011
How many people have to be relocated before you care? Start counting the Maldives, Cartaret and Tuvalu islands, and Bangladesh. Many coastal cities have been installing pumps and constructing dikes for some time.
05:30 PM on 02/20/2011
They also revealed today for the 1st time that they were able to see the cow jumped over the Moon!!!
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12:57 PM on 02/20/2011
the flaw I find in all this, with dilluted salt levels, I will form faster, but evaporation will increase and the planet will have more cloud cover. they never explain how they put that into the equation. 5,000 years ago the sahara was a wetland, this might be what is needed for it to happen again.
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DocSkull
My questions aren't rhetorical.
04:53 PM on 02/20/2011
"the planet will have more cloud cover. they never explain how they put that into the equation."

The clouds absorb more solar radiation than they reflect.
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06:54 PM on 02/20/2011
not water clouds, they have the reverse affect. I think they have a serious flaw in the model
08:51 PM on 02/21/2011
Clouds reflect more than soil. That is all that matters. It is my understanding that cumulus stratus clouds reflect more than they absorb.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
realpolitic
Proud member of the reality-based community!
07:56 PM on 02/20/2011
"A group of researchers from the University of Miami and the Scripps Institute of Oceanography studied cloud data of the northeast Pacific Ocean — both from satellites and from the human eye — over the past 50 years and combined that with climate models. They found that low-level clouds tend to dissipate as the ocean warms — which means a warmer world could well have less cloud cover. "That would create positive feedback, a reinforcing cycle that continues to warm the climate," says Amy Clement, a climate scientist at the University of Miami and the lead author of the Science study."

Read more: http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1912448,00.html#ixzz1EYBy7b7n
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tooncesrocks
my micro bio is empty
08:30 PM on 02/20/2011
perfection!

I love you :D
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
realpolitic
Proud member of the reality-based community!
02:39 AM on 02/20/2011
Flooding can also come in the form of increased precipitation.  "There has been an “increase of precipitation, especially heavy and very heavy
precipitation” in the last few decades. This increase is “significant” and growing. The
number of large rainstorms is increasing. Likewise, the number of days with more
than two inches of rainfall has increased by 20% in the last century.31 These changes
will put increasing pressure on the nation’s existing flood-control infrastructure."

http://www.edf.org/documents/6271_AmericasFloodRiskIsHeatingUp.pdf
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
demdame1
05:56 PM on 02/19/2011
When waters rise in the halls of Congress, they will be calling Joe the Plumber
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ILoveFiction
That's unbelievable!
06:56 PM on 02/19/2011
Hah! That's riot! Run for office in 2012 so you can be there to see it yourself!
03:59 PM on 02/19/2011
We continue to look to the short term and make no big plans for the future.

The Republican philosophy is every man/woman for themselves.

Don't look for any help from anyone.
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tooncesrocks
my micro bio is empty
08:38 PM on 02/20/2011
true for republicans... true for democrats. the american political parties like to split hairs on "major issues" which are really just little issues...

the big issues... they're both employees of the same company. Fossil fuels... all in favor. Alternative energy... only if our big friends can make millions on it. Environment... protect it unless it interferes with corporate profits... and if that's the case then screw the environment (Obama's waiver to fracking companies, petrochemical companies).

There really is no difference between the parties. the humor of it all is that they have everyone fooled... fighting over nonsensical issues... all the while running the corporate agenda out the back door...
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
danglines
05:04 AM on 02/19/2011
Could? what poor reporting. I suppose after you drown you'll say the water was just a bit deep!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ClimateHawk
Think before posting.
08:57 PM on 02/18/2011
Miami Beach is an example of one coastal community taking this seriously:

http://green.miamidade.gov/climatechange.htm

"Even now at high tide, water seeps up from below ground on Miami Beach's streets ..."

(time 3:30 in this video: http://www.climatecentral.org/videos/web_features/adapting_miami_to_climate_change/ )
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cambo
On the grand MN's side.
08:37 PM on 02/18/2011
I bet it will happen before they estimated, more like 2040.