Category:Sea-Level Rise & Mitigation

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Sea-Level Rise & Mitigation

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Adaptation Action Planning

Florida

Southeast Florida Climate Compact

Adaptation action-ICLEI model

Resiliency against sea-level rise

NASA study of Southeast Florida Vulnerability to Sea-Level Rise

Florida and the Surging Seas, a Vulnerability Assessment

Miami in Deep

South Florida Faces Ominous Prospects from Rising Waters / NYT

South Florida Rising Seas - PBS

Rising Seas: South Florida, Inching toward Disaster

Florida - Impact of Sea Level Rise on Energy and Water

California

Sea Level Rise Vulnerability Study - City of Los Angeles

Over the next century, sea level rise in the Los Angeles (L.A.) region is expected to match global projections with an increase of 0.1 - 0.6 m (5 - 24 inches) from 2000 to 2050 and 0.4 - 1.7 m (17 - 66 inches) from 2000 to 2100. [2]

Los Angeles critical coastal infrastructure at the Port of Los Angeles (Port) is approximately 10 ft above sea level. Under current conditions, some of this infrastructure is vulnerable to flooding during high tide events and severe storms. This flooding is expected to worsen as sea level rise contributes to increased total water levels. The Port is among the busiest in the world, contributing more than $63 billion to the State of California, and more than $260 billion to the U.S. economy. More than 40% of all imports arriving in the U.S. comes through the Ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, where it is loaded onto trucks and trains for overland shipping (Port of Los Angeles 2012)... [3]

New York City

Post Superstorm Sandy, estimated $29 Billion plan sets stage for future [4] Mayor's Plan to Protect NYC A Stronger, More Resilient New York [5] Superstorm barrier for New York - June 4, 2014 13 Mile Long Levee at tip of Manhattan

In a settlement that could have far-reaching implications nationwide, New York’s largest utility is now responsible for preparing for a future of extreme weather, including the impacts of climate change. June 5, 2014 [6]

Global/National - US

Global sea level rise (SLR) trends provide valuable evidence in preparing for future environmental change but, by themselves, are insufficient for assessing the risks associated with an uncertain future. For example, a number of recent studies project an increase in the rate and magnitude of global SLR.... Aside from this report, there is currently no coordinated, interagency effort in the US to identify agreed upon global mean SLR estimates for the purpose of coastal planning, policy, and management. -- NOAA - Nov 2012 [7]

GlobalChange.gov -- NOAA coordinated with Federal and scientific agencies - Dec 2012

A new sea level rise scenarios report is released by NOAA's Climate Program Office in collaboration with twelve contributing authors from ten different federal and academic science institutions. The report, produced in response to a request from the U.S. National Climate Assessment Development and Advisory Committee, provides a synthesis of the scientific literature on global sea level rise, and a set of four scenarios of future global sea level rise. Global Sea Level Rise Scenarios for the United States National Climate Assessment NY/NJ Sea Rise Assessment 2013 - News and Updates

Earth Imaging: The Antarctic: Big Melt Accelerates [8]

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Resilience - Community - Hazard Mitigation: Integrating Best Practices into Planning ... As we have learned more about the environment and the risks inherent in the forces of nature, government has acquired new responsibilities to address those risks... [9] FEMA - PDF

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Against the Tide (Book)

Castles built on sand are doomed, they say. But in our hunger for an ocean view from the living-room window, we keep building things we expect to last on beaches that never stay still. In Against the Tide, Cornelia Dean, science editor of The New York Times, outlines the global coastal management crisis and all the elaborate engineering methods developed to stave off erosion--revetments, sand-trapping devices, seawalls, groins and jetties, even artificial seaweed beds. In clear, journalistic style, she explains how all of these devices have failed to stop the inexorable march of the sea...

An eloquent, forceful plea to save America's rapidly eroding beaches and coastline, this revelatory and disturbing report from the science editor of the New York Times is reminiscent of Rachel Carson's Silent Spring in its sense of urgency and moral passion. From the motels and T-shirt shops of beachless Florida "beach towns" to Los Angeles County, most of whose beaches are artificial, the story Dean tells is the same. People build on unstable landforms, then attempt to avoid the inevitable consequences through quick technological fixes: concrete seawalls, artificial reefs, sand-trapping steel groins, jetties, underground "dewatering" systems of pipes and pumps, etc. These techno-fixes may prolong the life of coastal buildings, but they usually accelerate erosion and environmental degradation...

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Florida (sea-level mapping)

Sea-rise near-, mid-, long-term projections


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Rising Seas_Art

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In Denial

[Denial Problems]

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Subcategories

This category has the following 9 subcategories, out of 9 total.

E

F

G

P

S

W

Pages in category "Sea-Level Rise & Mitigation"

The following 86 pages are in this category, out of 86 total.

Media in category "Sea-Level Rise & Mitigation"

The following 200 files are in this category, out of 743 total.

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