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Playinghardball

(11,665 posts)
Thu Sep 4, 2014, 03:58 PM Sep 2014

A slow-motion disaster gnaws at US shores as sea level rises

Missions flown from the NASA base here have documented some of the most dramatic evidence of a warming planet over the past 20 years: the melting of polar ice, a force contributing to a global rise in ocean levels.

The Wallops Flight Facility’s relationship with rising seas doesn’t end there. Its billion-dollar space launch complex occupies a barrier island that’s drowning under the impact of worsening storms and flooding.

NASA’s response? Rather than move out of harm’s way, officials have added more than $100 million in new structures over the past five years and spent $43 million more to fortify the shoreline with sand. Nearly a third of that new sand has since been washed away.

Across a narrow inlet to the north sits the island town of Chincoteague, gateway to a national wildlife refuge blessed with a stunning mile-long recreational beach – a major tourist draw and source of big business for the community. But the sea is robbing the townspeople of their main asset.

The beach has been disappearing at an average rate of 10 to 22 feet (3 to 7 meters) a year. The access road and a 1,000-car parking lot have been rebuilt five times in the past decade because of coastal flooding, at a total cost of $3 million.

Officials of the wildlife refuge say they face a losing battle against rising seas. In 2010, they proposed to close the beach and shuttle tourists by bus to a safer stretch of sandy shoreline.

The town revolted. Like many local residents, Wanda Thornton, the town’s representative on the Accomack County board of supervisors, accepts that the sea is rising, but is skeptical that climate change and its effects have anything to do with the erosion of the beach. As a result, “I’m just not convinced that it requires the drastic change that some people think it does,” she said.

Four years on, after a series of angry public meetings, the sea keeps eating the shore, and the government keeps spending to fix the damage.

Wallops officials and the people of Chincoteague are united at the water’s edge in a battle against rising seas.

More here: http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2014/09/04/a-slow-motion-disaster-gnaws-at-us-shores-as-sea-level-rises/

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A slow-motion disaster gnaws at US shores as sea level rises (Original Post) Playinghardball Sep 2014 OP
Street flooding in south Miami should be a major wakeup call Warpy Sep 2014 #1
Until Washington values science over a quick buck Blue_Tires Sep 2014 #2
They will go down with their ship. upaloopa Sep 2014 #3
Well they can try the head in sand approach...until the water finally rushes in Rex Sep 2014 #4
k&r for exposure. n/t Laelth Sep 2014 #5

Warpy

(111,165 posts)
1. Street flooding in south Miami should be a major wakeup call
Thu Sep 4, 2014, 04:02 PM
Sep 2014

since it occurs on clear, storm free days during lunar peaks in tides. Soon it will occur at high tide every day, just before it hops over the gutters and into the stores and houses.

upaloopa

(11,417 posts)
3. They will go down with their ship.
Thu Sep 4, 2014, 04:15 PM
Sep 2014

Soon insurance companies will not cover them. Yet they will still deny global warming. Their ideology is there religion and Faux News is their bible.

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