Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Fla. sees ominous sign from rising waters

Climate issue ignored by state legislator­s

- By Nick Madigan The New York Times

MIAMI BEACH, Fla. — In the most dire prediction­s, South Florida’s delicate barrier islands, coastal communitie­s and captivatin­g subtropica­l beaches will be lost to the rising waters in as few as 100 years.

Further inland, the Everglades, the river of grass that gives the region its freshwater, could one day be useless, some scientists fear, contaminat­ed by the inexorable advance of the salt-filled ocean. The Florida Keys, the pearl-like strand of islands that stretches into the Gulf of Mexico, would be mostly submerged alongside their exotic crown jewel, Key West.

“I don’t think people realize how vulnerable Florida is,” Harold Wanless, the chairman of the geological sciences department at the University of Miami, said in an interview last week. “We’re going to get 4 or 5 or 6 feet of water, or more, by the end of the century. You have to wake up to the reality of what’s coming.”

Concern about rising seas is stirring not only in the halls of academia but also in local government­s along the state’s southeaste­rn coast.

The four counties there — Broward, Miami-Dade, Monroe and Palm Beach, with a combined population of 5.6 million — have formed an alliance to figure out solutions.

Long battered by hurricanes and prone to flooding from intense thundersto­rms, Florida is the most vulnerable state in the country to the rise in sea levels.

Even prediction­s more modest than Mr. Wanless’ foresee most of low-lying coastal Florida subject to increasing­ly frequent floods as the polar ice caps melt more quickly and the oceans surge and gain ground.

Much of Florida’s 1,197mile coastline is only a few feet above the current sea level, and billions of dollars’ worth of buildings, roads and other infrastruc­ture lies on highly porous limestone that leaches water like a sponge.

But although officials in Miami Beach and in other coastal cities, many of whom attended a two-day conference on climate change last week in Fort Lauderdale, have begun to address the problem, the issue has gotten little traction among state legislator­s in Tallahasse­e.

The issue appears to be similarly opaque to segments of the community — business, real estate, tourism — that have a vested interest in protecting South Florida’s bustling economy.

“The business community for the most part is not engaged,” said Wayne Pathman, a Miami land-use lawyer and Chamber of Commerce board member who attended the Fort Lauderdale conference. “They’re not affected yet. They really haven’t grasped the possibilit­ies.”

It will take a truly magnificen­t effort, Mr. Pathman said, to find answers to the critical issues confrontin­g the area. Ultimately, he said, the most salient indicator of the crisis will be the insurance industry’s refusal to handle risk in Florida coastal areas and around the country that are deemed too exposed to rising seas.

“People tend to underestim­ate the gravity here, I think, because it sounds far off,” said Ben Strauss, the director of the Program on Sea Level Rise at Climate Central, an independen­t organizati­on of scientists. “People are starting to tune in, but it’s not front and center. Miami is a boom town now, but in the future that I’m very confident will come, it will be obvious to everyone that the sea is marching inland and it’s not going to stop.”

The effects on real estate value alone could be devastatin­g, Mr. Strauss said. His research shows that there is about $156 billion worth of property, and 300,000 homes, on 2,120 square miles of land that is less than 3 feet above the high tide line in Florida.

At that same level, Mr. Strauss said, Florida has 2,555 miles of road, 35 public schools, one power plant and 966 sites listed by the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, such as hazardous waste dumps and sewage plants.

The amount of real estate value, and the number of properties potentiall­y affected, rises incrementa­lly with each inch of sea-level rise, he said.

Mr. Wanless insists that no amount of engineerin­g proposals will stop the onslaught of the seas.

“At 2 to 3 feet, we start to lose everything,” he said.

The only answer, he said, is to consider drastic measures like establishi­ng a moratorium on developmen­t along coastal areas and to compel residents whose homes are threatened to move inland.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States