New York is facing its biggest threat ever as waters rise
Hurricane Sandy struck without mercy. Tempestuous winds downed trees and electric lines, smashing cars and homes. Walls of water overwhelmed barriers, wiped away homes, and crippled subway lines. Within hours, thousands of New York City homes lost power. In the ensuing chaos, the city lost $25 billion in estimated business activity.
As bad as Sandy was, she was only a hint of the destruction to come. While our grandparents most likely lived through only one storm of Sandy’s scale, our grandchildren can expect to see at least 20.
While climate change is best known for lifting sea levels and raising temperatures, it will also make storms far more intense. As the Earth heats up, more water vapor — the fuel for storms — enters the atmosphere.
All this extra water vapor means rain and snow storms will become heavier and more common. In the most likely scenario, the "Middle range" in the chart below, rain and snowfall across the city will increase by about 5% by end of the decade, about 7% by midcentury, and about 9% by the 2080s.
Severe pacific storms, or hurricanes, will get worse too. As oceans warm, hurricanes like Sandy that originate in the Atlantic will become more intense. For each 1.8-degree-Fahrenheit increase in sea surface temperatures, as much as 18% more rain will fall during a hurricane, and storm winds could get about 8% stronger.
The Power Dissipation Index (PDI), shown in green on the right, is a measure of hurricane activity that includes its frequency, duration, and intensity.
As oceans get warmer and northern sea ice begins to melt, sea levels will rise, increasing the frequency of floods. Eventually, entire sections of New York City will be permanently submerged.
Rising seas have already increased water levels near New York City nearly 1.5 feet since the mid-1800s. As a result, dangerous waves are now 20 times more likely to overwhelm the Manhattan seawall than they were 170 years ago.
By 2100, sea levels in the New York metro region could rise by as much as 75 inches, double the total area set out in 2013's designated coastal flooding zones, according to the Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences report. The colored areas of the city in the map below will be flooded when a Hurricane Sandy-like storm happens in the future.
Manhattan isn't the only part of the city at risk. Sizeable chunks of Brooklyn and Queens, with their combined 250 miles of waterfront, are at serious risk of flooding. Many of these high-risk areas are also home to some of the city’s fastest-growing neighborhoods, like Long Island City, Queens, and Boerum Hill, Brooklyn.
These areas are also where many of the city’s important transit hubs are located. Parts of John F. Kennedy and LaGuardia airports (on opposite sides of Queens), sit just 2 to 6 feet above sea level. Storms frequently produce flood waters higher than that — Hurricane Sandy’s surge waves were 14 feet tall.
Beaches in those areas, on the other hand, will quite literally be washed away by these huge flooding events and eternally encroaching sea level. "Long-term coastal erosion is 100% probable" for Coney Island, Brooklyn, the Rockaways, Queens, and South Shore, Staten Island.
And even when not bracing for a flood, or holing up during an epic snow storm, New Yorkers will struggle to avoid extreme temperatures.
In winter, more polar vortices will hit the city as gusts of heat energy from melting arctic sea ice tear down the powerful wall of cold air that normally contains the frigid Arctic currents.
In summer, warmer temperatures will make being outside miserable. By the time our children retire, the June-August period in New York City, now averaging a balmy 82 degrees, will feel like summers in the south of Florida, where the season averages a steep 92 degrees.
Source: "Shifting Cities," Climate Central
The warming trend has been occurring since the 19th century, but has been accelerating in recent years. By the end of this decade, NYC temperatures will rise between 2 F and 3 F. By midcentury 2050s, they'll pick up by between 4 F and 6 F. And by century's end, NYC could be a full 10 F warmer.
By the 2050s, NYC could see as many as 7 heat waves per hear, with about 2 months' worth (or twice what we currently experience) of days where the maximum temperature is at or above 90 degrees Fahrenheit.
And while we might not like these changes, some species do. That includes insects, who reproduce when it’s warm out but stay dormant when it’s chilly. As average temperatures go up, critters like wasps and mosquitoes will stick around longer.
The Asian tiger mosquito, an invasive species that can carry diseases, is one such critter. Land area with the mosquito's preferred environmental conditions is expected to increase from the current 5% to 16% in the next two decades and somewhere between 43% and 49% by the end of the century.
The predicted expansion in the range of the Asian tiger mosquito in the New York area from the present to 2080. Present range based on 1950 to 2000 climate data. Source: PLOS One
Climate change will affect New Yorkers' diets, too, as changing temperatures put pressure on Northeastern dairy farms.
Speaking of dairy, do you like lox with your schmear? In the next few decades, warmer waters will drive away local populations of the salmon used for the popular bagel topping. Native brook trout will disappear from New York waters, too. Bass might come to the area in their place, as the species loves warmer water.
Local varieties of apples will vanish, too. Macintosh and Empire apples will disappear from farmer’s market shelves by 2100.
While the snacks you bring along on weekend hikes will soon vanish, so too will the hikes themselves. Love taking in the fresh air of the Adirondacks or the Catskills? Better enjoy them now. None of the plants or animals native to these spruce-fir forests will survive in a climate just five degrees warmer. Both forests will begin to die out as soon as 2050.
There are plans to stop the demise of America’s greatest city. They include this green buffer zone, which its designers are calling ‘The Big U.’
The plan, from the Danish Bjarke Ingels Group, would surround all of lower Manhattan with 10 miles of artificial embankments, gardens and sloping green hills. The Big U has already received nearly $350 million in federal funding; construction is set to begin along Manhattan’s Lower East Side in the next few years.
Other winning designs include this plan for the Hunts Point section of the Bronx, where flood barriers and a system of shipping food to the city via water would help make the city more resilient to rising sea levels. Hunts Point Lifelines, as the project is called, is part of President Barack Obama’s post-Sandy rebuilding task force.
These protection plans show that once New Yorkers start taking a problem seriously, they can come up with some pretty creative solutions to help stop it. Let's hope we are doing enough.
You've seen how climate change will destroy the best things about New York City.
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