Climate
Council Plays Catch-Up with Mother Nature
By TIM
FAULKNER/ecoRI.org News staff
PROVIDENCE — Rhode Island is way ahead of other states
when it comes to climate-change
planning and policies, according to Grover Fugate, executive director of the Coastal Resources Management Council (CRMC). But the work is still not enough to adequately address the problems ahead, he said.
“Most of the tools we need don’t exist,” Fugate said during a March 27 meeting of Gov. Lincoln Chafee’s Executive Climate Change Council.
planning and policies, according to Grover Fugate, executive director of the Coastal Resources Management Council (CRMC). But the work is still not enough to adequately address the problems ahead, he said.
“Most of the tools we need don’t exist,” Fugate said during a March 27 meeting of Gov. Lincoln Chafee’s Executive Climate Change Council.
Here are
some findings noted by the council at its recent meeting:
During
heavy rains, storm drains are backing up at the approaches to two relatively
new bridges along the Barrington-Warren border. The flooding is of concern
because the water bogs down the main road connecting both towns, a road
that also serves as an emergency evacuation route.
Sea
levels in Rhode Island are elevating faster than the global rate of increase,
according to Fugate. He said the height of Narragansett Bay could increase 2-3
feet by 2050.
Downtown
Providence, Wickford Village and
the Newport waterfront are at risk of significant damage from 3 feet of
sea-level rise. Coastal roads in Narragansett and Jamestown are at risk of
being underwater with a foot of sea-level rise
Higher
flood insurance
premiums and disputed
flood maps have had a “chilling effect” on the local real-estate market,
according to Jamia McDonald, executive director of the Rhode Island
Emergency Management Agency (RIEMA). The CRMC has officially disputed the maps,
which Fugate said are based on data from 1970. The maps, he said, overestimate
inland flooding and underestimate coastal flooding.
Municipalities are vastly
unprepared for the long-term commitment to address climate-change issues such
as disaster recovery. “Municipalities we all know are having trouble whether
they can even afford police departments and fire departments, let alone major
investments for this,” Fugate said.
McDonald
said RIEMA has significant funds available to pay for
infrastructure upgrades. Cities and towns must have approved storm mitigation
and recovery plans to receive money for rebuilding after a storm. Twenty-two
communities in Rhode Island don't have such a plan.
Erosion
is happening faster than the rate of recovery on beaches and
in wetlands along Rhode Island’s coast, Fugate said. He described the coast as
a “transgressive shoreline.”
Superstorm
Sandy caused
an estimated $42 million in recovery costs, yet the storm only hit Rhode Island
with a glancing blow, McDonald said. The Hurricane of 1938 was the last major
hurricane to directly strike Rhode Island, Fugate said.
The
Executive Climate Change Commission is scheduled to meet again April 4. It
plans to deliver an assessment by May 1.