A 20-Foot Sea Wall? Miami Faces the Hard Choices of Climate Change.

Page 1

STAR T H ER E

Menu

Search

BLOG

SU P P OR T OU R P R OJE CT S

A 20-Foot Sea Wall? Miami Faces the Hard Choices of Climate Change. HOME - ALL POSTS - ... - A 20-FOOT SEA WALL? MIAMI FACES THE HARD...

©Ashley Cooper

A proposal to construct barriers for storm surge protection has forced South Floridians to reckon with the many environmental challenges they face. MIAMI — Three years ago, not long after Hurricane Irma left parts of Miami underwater, the federal government embarked on a study to find a way to protect the vulnerable South Florida coast from deadly and destructive storm surge. Already, no one likes the answer. Build a wall, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers proposed in its first draft of the study, now under review. Six miles of it, in fact, mostly inland, running parallel to the coast through neighborhoods — except for a one-mile stretch right on Biscayne Bay, past the gleaming sky-rises of Brickell, the city’s financial district. The dramatic $6 billion proposal remains tentative and at least five years off. But the startling suggestion of a massive sea wall up to 20 feet high cutting across beautiful Biscayne Bay was enough to jolt some Miamians to attention: The hard choices that will be necessary to deal with the city’s many environmental challenges are here, and few people want to face them. “You need to have a conversation about, culturally, what are our priorities?” said Benjamin Kirtman, a professor of atmospheric sciences at the University of Miami. “Where do we want to invest? Where does it make sense?” “Those are what I refer to as generational questions,” he added. “And there is a tremendous amount of reluctance to enter into that discussion.” In Miami, the U.S. metropolitan area that is perhaps most exposed to sea-level rise, the problem is not climate change denialism. Not when hurricane season, which begins this week, returns each year with more intense and frequent storms. Not when finding flood insurance has become increasingly difficult and unaffordable. Not when the nights stay so hot that leaving home with a sweater to fend off the evening chill has become a thing of the past. The trouble is that the magnitude of the interconnected obstacles the region faces can feel overwhelming, and none of the possible solutions are cheap, easy or pretty. Published by the New York Times. To read complete article click here Waste Management Solution

What's your reaction?

0

0

1

0

COOL

UPSET

LOVE

LOL

EARTH

GREEN

P RE V

N EXT 

’Forever chemicals’ found in home

Plastic rafting: the invasive species

fertilizer made from sewage sludge

hitching a ride on ocean.

MAY 2 8, 2 0 2 1

JU N E 1 4 , 2 0 2 1

Related Posts

How big a deal is 1.5°C

Humanity Just

...

Produced The Biggest Increase ...

AUGUST 13, 2021 / C L I M AT E C H A N G E / EC O N O M Y / EN V I R O N M EN T / FU T U R E C O S T S / G A L L ER Y / N EW S & U P D AT ES / S C I EN C E & S O C I ET Y

MARCH 9, 2022 / C L I M AT E C H A N G E / C O 2 EM I S S I O N S / EN ER G Y / I N T ER N AT I O N A L / N EW S & U P D AT ES / S C I EN C E & S O C I ET Y

1 Comments graliontorile S E P T E MB E R 2 2 , 2 0 2 2

I like this web blog so much, saved to my bookmarks. 

R E P LY

Add Comment

Your Name *

Your E-mail *

Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment.

Your comment *

I agree that my submitted data is being collected and stored. For further details on handling user data, see our Privacy Policy

S EN D Y O UR C O MMEN T

About

Services

Legacy

Contacts

Vision & Mission

Education & Communication

Privacy Policy

12623 SE 83rd Ct.

IeRM Team

Research & Reporting

NewCastle, WA 98056 contact@ie-rm.org

Policy Development & Implementation

(206) 313-9774 

Copyright © 2022 IeRM, All Rights Reserved.

Powered by


Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.