Stephan: There are six million people living in south Florida and, as this report spells out, sea rise is happening quicker and in a more devastating form than anyone had anticipated. Probably in your lifetime Florida from Miami down will disappear beneath the waves.
Where do you think those people will be going? What do you think the financial impact on both their personal lives, and the economy in general will be?
Meanwhile the Trumplican Party is pushing greater carbon energy usage and arguing that climate change is some kind of undefined scheme to help some undefined beneficiary. As it stands approximately half of Americans either don't believe in climate change, those that are Trumplicans, or that even if it exists it won't affect them. Boy are they in for a surprise.
Take the six million people who live in south Florida today and divide them into two groups: those who live less than six and a half feet above the current high tide line, and everybody else.’
Credit: Milkweed Editions
In 1890, just over six thousand people lived in the damp lowlands of south Florida. Since then the wetlands that covered half the state have been largely drained, strip malls have replaced Seminole camps, and the population has increased a thousandfold. Over roughly the same amount of time the number of black college degree holders in the United States also increased a thousandfold, as did the speed at which we fly, the combined carbon emissions of the Middle East, and the entire population of Thailand.
About 60 of the region’s more than 6 million residents have gathered in the Cox Science Building at the University of Miami on a sunny Saturday morning in 2016 to hear Harold Wanless, or Hal, chair of the geology department, speak about sea level rise. “Only 7% of the […]