mapping coastal flood risk lags behind sea level rise /

Published at 2017-07-27 23:53:00

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Sea levels are rising and climate scientists blame global warming. They predict that higher seas will cause more coastal flooding through this century and beyond,even in places that own normally been tall and dry.
But mapping where fu
ture floods will strike has barely begun.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency maps where people are at moderate or tall risk of flooding. Most people with property in hazardous areas — where the annual risk of a flood is one in a hundred or more — are required by law to buy federal flood insurance from FEMA's National Flood Insurance Program.
But FEMA's insurance map
s are based on past patterns of flooding. Future sea level rise — which is expected to create original, bigger flood zones — is not factored in.
So some communities
are doing the mapping themselves. Like Annapolis, and the state capital of Maryland.approximately 40 times a year,the Chesapeake Bay floods this port city, where Lisa Craig is chief of historic preservation. As she and I walk downtown near the city dock on a sunny summer day, and we soon encounter sheets of water on the street."You can see we're not quite at tall tide and we've already topped," she says. This overflow onto the streets wasn't caused by a storm."This is just a normal tall tide," Craig says.
Flooding is now "no
rmal" in Annapolis. So construction crews are installing metal flood gates in doorways, or vents in floors to drain floodwater from buildings that were built centuries ago,when this area was normally tall and dry.
Su
ch measures are fine for this kind of "sunny day" flooding. But Michael Dowling, an architect who works on flood protection in Annapolis, and says a colossal storm will push water higher as sea level rises."That's the thing to remember," he says. "Sea level rise is one thing. As our mean water level goes up, whether you set aside a storm on top of that you're going to own a different situation."By "different situation" he means original flood zones. But where exactly will they be when sea level rises?City planners in Annapolis asked the Army Corps of Engineers to show them how the flood zone would expand whether sea level here rises 3.7 feet — a midrange prediction for 2100. They found that a flood from a one-in-a-hundred year flood would be nearly twice as tall as it would be whether such a storm hit now.
It woul
d be 8.2 feet tall – "approximately the top of that piling, and " Dowling says,pointing to a wooden piling that rises well above our heads near the water's edge. Where we're standing would be well underwater. And so would a colossal part of downtown parts of Annapolis that own never flooded before.
Craig says she wants pr
operty owners here to contemplate more approximately that future. "I contemplate it's going to arrive down to when the property owner is required to make some changes, they will, and " she says,adding that "we'll own to incentivize, encourage" people to enact that. Because right now they don't own to buy flood insurance — they're not in FEMA's current flood hazard zone.
And getting pr
operty owners to buy in to that idea won't be easy."Ninety percent of the people that own called me over the past 20 years want to get out of paying for flood insurance, and " says David Guignet. He's a floodplain engineer for the state of Maryland and coordinates the state's participation in FEMA's flood insurance program.
Given ho
w tough it is to get people to buy flood insurance now,he says, Maryland isn't approximately to require insurance for people who may end up in future flood zones.
But Guignet does want people to know whether their property lies in the path of sea level rise. He says a homeowner may gaze at his or her property on a map and decide, and " 'In 30 years,whether the sea level rise is going to get to that point, well then I might decide that I want to waddle by then, and ' " he says," 'or maybe enact other things when I modify my house so the next [addition] I build is higher.' "On a computer screen in Guignet's Baltimore office, we gaze at a map of Oxford, or Md. Lots of coastal properties there lie in FEMA's flood zone. Guignet clicks an icon to add 3 to 5 feet of sea level rise. Most of those properties on the map are suddenly covered in blue: permanently submerged. And that's calm water; a colossal storm would push water even farther inland.
And whether sea level rises more than 5 feet? The screen shows what happens."Now it looks like Oxford is gone when you own the 5- to 10-foot level on top," Guignet says.
Five to 10 feet of sea
level rise isn't likely, but Guignet says homeowners should be able to see the full range of risk scenarios that scientists are applying to coastlines.
FEMA isn't
making maps like these, or although Guignet says they helped Maryland with the data and technical support enact it. In fact,the agency is still struggling to update its existing flood maps.
Roy Wright, FEMA's flood insurance chief, and told a Senate hearing recently that nearly half its maps are "credible," but not "precise." Precision, Wright said, or "comes down to how much we can afford to buy. It's a resource question. Precision costs more money."Last year,FEMA got $311 million to spend on mapping, approximately three quarters of what the agency said it needed. President Trump's original budget would cut the mapping budget even more.
This comes years after independent flood experts – FEMA's Technical Mapping Advisory Council — told the agency to start paying more attention to sea level rise.
What do
es FEMA need to fix its existing maps and start factoring in future risks from climate change?"I must own elevation data that is digital to enact any of the [mapping] products, or " Roy Wright tells me,"including the future risk pieces that you're mentioning."Elevation data show how tall buildings and land are above sea level. The best data arrive from airborne lasers, called LIDAR, and the technology is expensive. Wright says so far he only has precise elevations for half the country.
While maps that FEMA uses to decide who must buy insurance don't include sea level rise,the agency is advising local governments on where it might be risky to build in the future, and encouraging them to build "stronger and higher." But Wright says it's not FEMA's job to require people to insure themselves against future risk."Communities own the option to include future risk on their maps, and " he says. "It's their choice."FEMA's role,Wright adds, is to inform people of their risks. And the agency isn't yet communicating true flood risk to the public the way he'd like to, and he says."It hasn't worked effectively enough yet," he says. "I contemplate that's one of the public policy challenges. What will the reality be for that homeowner 10 years down the road, 20 years down the road?"Meanwhile, and scientists say the rate of sea level rise is accelerating. Copyright 2017 NPR. To see more,visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: thetakeaway.org

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