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posted by Fnord666 on Sunday August 11 2019, @10:52AM   Printer-friendly
from the clam-soup dept.

Submitted via IRC for Bytram

With nowhere to hide from rising seas, Boston prepares for a wetter future

Boston dodged a disaster in 2012. After Hurricane Sandy devastated parts of New Jersey and New York, the superstorm hit Boston near low tide, causing minimal damage. If Sandy had arrived four hours earlier, many Bostonians would have been ankle to hip deep in seawater.

Across the globe, sea levels are rising, delivering bigger storm surges and higher tides to coastal cities. In Boston, the most persistent reminder comes in the form of regular "nuisance" flooding — when seawater spills onto roads and sidewalks during high tides. Those nuisance events are harbingers of a wetter future, when extreme high tides are predicted to become a daily occurrence.

"The East Coast has been riding a post-Sandy mentality of preparing and responding before the next big one," says Robert Freudenberg, an environmental planner at the Regional Plan Association, an urban research and advocacy firm based in New York City. But a more enduring kind of threat looms. "Sea level rise is the flooding that doesn't go away," he says. "Not that far in the future, some of our most developed places may be permanently inundated."

And Boston, for one, is not waiting to get disastrously wet to act. In the seven years since Hurricane Sandy's close call, the city-run Climate Ready Boston initiative has devised a comprehensive, science-driven master plan to protect infrastructure, property and people from the increasingly inevitable future of storm surges and rising seas. The famously feisty city intends to be ready for the next Sandy as well as the nuisance tides that promise to become the new normal, while other U.S. coastal cities are trying to keep up.


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  • (Score: 1) by khallow on Monday August 12 2019, @04:18AM (2 children)

    by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Monday August 12 2019, @04:18AM (#879078) Journal

    Like your "do nothing now about those emission, just move the cities upwards when flooded" solution.

    Indeed. I think you're starting to get my arguments. There's still a bunch of misplaced negativity there, but maybe you'll figure it out.

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 12 2019, @04:55AM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 12 2019, @04:55AM (#879092)

    Let us remember and then keep in mind that "get it != agree".
    Perhaps you'll stop the misplaced whining about "misplaced negativity" once you figure out the two above.

    • (Score: 1) by khallow on Monday August 12 2019, @02:05PM

      by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Monday August 12 2019, @02:05PM (#879182) Journal

      Let us remember and then keep in mind that "get it != agree".

      Didn't say otherwise. I'm not expecting agreement right now. But I think a few decades from now when fire didn't follow that smoke, we may find that we have better things to concern ourselves with than some old, hysterical fad. Hopefully, that will mean that you learn something from this episode and won't find a new, hysterical fad to latch to. The terrorists will win if you do that.