"Disaster is closer than we thought," said one climate scientist.
JULIA CONLEY
for Common Dreams
Hundreds
of thousands of homes and other properties across millions of acres in the
U.S. are projected to be at least partially submerged by sea water by 2050,
according to a new analysis released Thursday, with major implications not just
for homeowners but also public services in their communities as tax bases in
hundreds of counties are expected to shrink.Photo from
listing of CCA Council member Bonnita Van Slyke, on sale for $2,395,000.
But if you hold out until 2050, it'll be underwater.
The
nonprofit research group Climate Central examined the
sea level rise that's been projected by experts at the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)—which found earlier
this year that sea levels in U.S. coastal areas could rise by about one foot by
2050—tidal boundary lines, and records regarding more than 50 million
properties in coastal areas, finding that nearly 650,000 individual properties
are most at risk of falling below tidal boundaries within the next three
decades.
"Sea
level rise is shifting the high and low tide lines that coastal states use to
define boundaries between public and private property," said Climate
Central. "As these boundaries shift, private property will be lost to
permanent coastal flooding."
Louisiana has the most homes and other buildings at risk, with more than 25,000 properties across 2.5 million acres expected to fall below tide level boundaries by 2050—amounting to 8.7% of the state's total land area being inundated by sea water.
Florida,
North Carolina, and Texas are the next three most at-risk states in the nation,
accounting for 87% of the land area expected to be lost to the sea. New Jersey,
New York, and Maryland were also identified as states that are likely to see
thousands of properties submerged.
Don
Bain, a senior adviser at Climate Central who led the research, told The
Washington Post that the analysis should be a wake-up call for
frontline communities that need to adapt to the coming sea level ris as
government inaction continues in the face of rising carbon emissions.
"As
the sea is rising, tide lines are moving up elevation, upslope and
inland," Bain told The Post. "People really haven't
internalized that yet—that 'Hey, I'm going to have something taken away from me
by the sea.'"
The
one foot of sea level rise that's projected to take place over the next 30
years roughly matches the change that's taken place over the past century, and
the rise is expected to accelerate after 2050. By 2100, more than one million
buildings with a combined assessed value of $108 billion will be at least
partially submerged at high tide.
"Sea
level rise disaster is closer than we thought," said climate scientist
Jonathan Overpeck in response to the analysis.
Alice
Hill, senior fellow for energy and the environment at the Council on Foreign
Relations, said in a statement that the study could help communities assess
their risk of "the economic impacts of sea level rise," as coastal
communities are expected to lose a significant amount of taxable properties in
the coming decades—leaving local governments with less revenue to fund schools,
road construction and repair, fire departments, and other public services.
"Understanding
where and when financial impacts will be most acute can inform action and
support at the state and national level, assisting local efforts to maintain critical
services and adapt to our changing climate," said Hill.
While
NOAA has warned that approximately a foot of sea level rise by 2050 is
relatively certain, scientists agree that sharply reducing fossil fuel
emissions will slow the heating of the planet, which is melting glaciers and
ice sheets across the globe and warming the Earth's oceans, causing their
volume to expand.
"If
we get our act together, we can get to a lower curve, and that buys us
time," Bain told The Post. "We don't want [seas] rising
so fast that it outpaces our capacity to adapt."
Climate
Central's research was released weeks after President Joe Biden signed the
Inflation Reduction Act into law, garnering applause from progressives for the
package's $369 billion in climate action and energy security investments—while
also provoking
condemnation from climate campaigners. The law mandates a
continuation of oil and gas drilling and includes a carbon capture scheme,
which critics say is meant to "extend the life of the fossil fuel
industry."
"Emissions
matter, especially as we get beyond the next 20 or 30 years,"
oceanographer and sea level rise expert William Sweet told The Post. "You
reduce emissions, you reduce your likelihood of higher sea levels."