Edward Mazria wants people to know how rising sea levels made worse by global warming will affect residents along U.S. coastlines. Goodbye, Hollywood, Fla. So long, Boston. New Orleans? Forget about it. ‘We’re not talking about South Sea islands and Bangladesh here,’ Mazria said. ‘We’re talking about the U.S. being physically under siege with a very small increment of sea level rise.’ Mazria isn’t a climatologist. He’s not even a scientist. He’s an architect who gave up running his company in January to devote his time to a nonprofit group he founded several years ago. Called Architecture 2030, the organization tries to bring attention to the amount of greenhouse gas emissions that the building sector contributes to global warming through inefficient electricity use, lighting, heating and cooling. ‘The building sector is responsible for close to half of all energy consumption in this country and close to half of all greenhouse gas emissions,’ he said. Buildings are the single largest contributor to global warming, he said, emitting more than even automobiles. To demonstrate Mazria’s point, Architecture 2030 has compiled a report that features images depicting the dramatic effects of sea level rise […]

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