Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Rising seas could swamp Mar-a-Lago

- By Skyler Swisher Staff writer

If scientists are right, rising seas will one day swamp the “Winter White House,” part-time home to a president who has labeled climate change a hoax.

President Donald Trump has said he’s “not a believer in man-made global warming.” Less than an hour after he became president, most references to climate change disappeare­d from the official White House website.

But people like Palm Beach County Commission­er Steven Abrams, a

Republican, say Trump should seriously consider the risks to his prized waterfront property, the Mar-aLago club and resort in Palm Beach, where he spent this weekend.

“Even though he’s president, Mar-a-Lago is not invulnerab­le to sea level rise,” Abrams said.

Trump’s views on global warming conflict with worst-case scenarios from the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion, which projects sea levels rising by more than 6 feet by the end of the century. At that level, the sea would swallow up a portion of Mar-a-Lago, along with surroundin­g properties in Palm Beach.

Harold Wanless, chairman of the geological sciences department at the University of Miami, said he thinks that models underestim­ate sea level rise and that Trump’s property could be threatened even sooner. The 20-acre estate is nestled between the Intracoast­al Waterway and the Atlantic Ocean.

As the ocean rises, Mar-aLago will become more vulnerable to seasonal king tides, coastal erosion and storm surge. Wanless said he expects most of South Florida’s barrier islands will become uninhabita­ble by the middle of the century as roads and sewage systems are swamped by the rising waters.

“The flooding will become so frequent on barrier islands it will become an unacceptab­le risk,” he said.

Wanless and nine other Florida scientists sent a letter in December to Mar-aLago requesting a meeting with Trump on climate change.

“Many of Florida’s waterfront properties [including yours] are vulnerable to even minor increases in sea level because of erosion and storm surge,” they wrote. “This is not a distant threat. Climate change is making an impact today.”

There are already areas where oceanfront homes and condominiu­ms, particular­ly in lower-lying MiamiDade and Broward counties, will become unlivable and unsellable within a 30-year period, the length of a common mortgage, because of sea level rise, Wanless said.

Trump has taken a different tone in his public statements. He famously tweeted in 2012 that the Chinese created global warming to hurt U.S. manufactur­ing.

But as a businessma­n, Trump also moved to protect a golf course in Ireland against the projected effects of climate change. In a meeting with reporters and editors at The New York Times after the election, Trump said there may be “some connectivi­ty” between human activity and climate change.

He also said he would keep an “open mind” on keeping the United States in the Paris climate agreement, which has been signed by more than 174 countries and seeks to limit global warming to 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit). The agreement requires countries to present national plans on reducing greenhouse gas emissions. While targets are not legally binding, participan­ts must report their emissions and progress on meeting goals.

In South Florida, both Republican­s and Democrats have acted on climate change, putting millions into improving drainage, elevating roads and hiring climate change planners.

Palm Beach County joined a regional compact on climate change in 2010 with Miami-Dade, Broward and Monroe counties. In 2015, Palm Beach County commission­ers hired a climate change coordinato­r, a position that pays $86,000 a year.

While local efforts have not received large sums of federal dollars, Trump’s stance could have an effect if federal agencies don’t play as active of a role on researchin­g climate change, said Jason Liechty, environmen­tal projects coordinato­r for Broward County.

“We stand to lose the technical assistance, the support, the help that the federal government provided,” he said.

The only references to climate change on the White House website is a pledge in Trump’s “America First Energy Plan” to eliminate “harmful and unnecessar­y policies such as the Climate Action Plan and the Waters of the U.S. rule.”

Abrams, one of two Republican­s on the sevenmembe­r Palm Beach County Commission, said his constituen­ts in Boca Raton are worried that rising seas will inundate expensive oceanfront properties.

“At the local level,” he said, “I don’t have the luxury of engaging in these lofty debates that they do in Washington — when I am kneedeep in flooding in my coastal communitie­s.”

 ?? GERARDO MORA/GETTY IMAGES ?? President Trump’s 20-acre estate is nestled between the Intracoast­al Waterway and the Atlantic Ocean.
GERARDO MORA/GETTY IMAGES President Trump’s 20-acre estate is nestled between the Intracoast­al Waterway and the Atlantic Ocean.
 ?? MANDEL NGAN/AFP ?? In 2013, President Donald Trump tweeted “Global warming is a total, and very expensive, hoax!”
MANDEL NGAN/AFP In 2013, President Donald Trump tweeted “Global warming is a total, and very expensive, hoax!”

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