craigworknova t1_j1gkh3j wrote
They should just buy these people out. Knock down the house and restore the land. They can move inland.
[deleted] t1_j1gles0 wrote
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kslusherplantman t1_j1gnqid wrote
Just ask the Dutch how the sea walls are working…
kingofpotatopeople92 t1_j1hsxvx wrote
That's like asking the Thwaites Glacier not to shatter next year. In other words, what difference is it really going to make?
Tar_alcaran t1_j1lkqjx wrote
We're coming up on 70 years with no flooding thanks to the Delta Works, so I'd say there's a pretty big difference.
kingofpotatopeople92 t1_j1m8922 wrote
Well you've been working with centimeters of sea rise. Let's see how it works with meters 70 years early. Good luck ;)
Tar_alcaran t1_j1n61hq wrote
Thats why we're spending over a billion per year, upgrading to the the worst of the current projections instead of the average of the 1990s projections
kingofpotatopeople92 t1_j1n7e0j wrote
Best of Luck.
Tar_alcaran t1_j1nljsw wrote
As someone living at 5m below sea level, thanks!
[deleted] t1_j1gqzgb wrote
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[deleted] t1_j1hh6rr wrote
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qtx t1_j1hrqyw wrote
Venice only made flood gates. The were finished in 2020 and they seem to work well, but they are just flood gates, not actual permanent defenses. So it's not sure they will work against rising sea levels.
kingofpotatopeople92 t1_j1ht77g wrote
Those flood gates will make a great archeological find in the future. /s
endadaroad t1_j1id7lt wrote
Must have been built by aliens. /s
[deleted] t1_j1jszpq wrote
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yo2sense t1_j1h7e2w wrote
Doesn't seem to make much sense to spend $52 billion to try to protect the $147 billion worth of property that are on the current floodplain when we are expecting sea levels to rise.
Agent_Angelo_Pappas t1_j1hl81v wrote
That’s only what’s at imminent risk today. Every year that number will grow as rising sea levels expose more and more of the city. This infrastructure would be the foundation of what will protect the whole of New York City as the century continues and conditions get worse
New York City is one of America’s most efficiently populated spaces. More than half the population uses public transportation regularly and they are densely packed in limiting the amount of land use per person. If the goal is to minimize ecological impact then we want Americans living in places like New York. It probably is worth walling it up than ceding that to the ocean.
Brave-Examination-70 t1_j1ivzr9 wrote
They'd be better off restoring the wetlands, sandbars, and other natural elements that used to prevent this from happening. Cheaper and more effective.
asdaaaaaaaa t1_j1i4gtw wrote
I also wonder how much extra energy is "saved" through winters due to heavy population. Heavily populated cities like that tend to stay warmer due to all the heat bleeding from vehicles/electronics/buildings, right? Not to mention I'd imagine it's cheaper heating x25 apartments in one building than say, 20 or so separate houses.
Brave-Examination-70 t1_j1iw23q wrote
Cities are vastly more efficient than suburbs.
11fingerfreak t1_j1kqulk wrote
There’s nothing we’re going to create that will permanently keep the ocean at bay. The only things we could’ve done are:
- stop cutting down trees
- stop putting greenhouse gasses in the air
We collectively choose to do neither. So that’s done and over with. There’s nothing that’s going to change what we did at this point. We adapt or we die and go broke along the way. Pretending there’s some magical terraforming we’re going to engage in that will prevent the ocean from rising at this point is magical thinking.
Agent_Angelo_Pappas t1_j1lmrde wrote
The Netherlands would disagree that you can’t dam up a coast.
[deleted] t1_j1i4hzx wrote
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[deleted] t1_j1jkvh5 wrote
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asdaaaaaaaa t1_j1i47yj wrote
Depends on who owns those properties. If say, a major CEO who could decide the pricing/availability of a new contract with the state or something owned one or a few, it can certainly influence decisions. The examples unlikely, but stuff like that does happen.
TenderfootGungi t1_j1hzpob wrote
On a same note, we need to give the majority of flood planes back to the rivers, at least in rural areas, and stop rebuilding buildings below sea level.
[deleted] t1_j1jubin wrote
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