This is an excellent article. Unfortunately for those of us with little time on our hands, it’s long. But if you can find the time, it’s worth it, because the author is pointing out to us that which ought to be obvious: the climate and the associated weather patterns, along with the inevitable flow of capital (i.e., money, particularly from homeowners insurance companies and mortgage lenders), will be forcing us to move from those areas most directly impacted by the changing climate to more suitable spots.
Excerpt from this story from the New York Times:
For years, Americans have avoided confronting these changes in their own backyards. The decisions we make about where to live are distorted not just by politics that play down climate risks, but also by expensive subsidies and incentives aimed at defying nature. In much of the developing world, vulnerable people will attempt to flee the emerging perils of global warming, seeking cooler temperatures, more fresh water and safety. But here in the United States, people have largely gravitated toward environmental danger, building along coastlines from New Jersey to Florida and settling across the cloudless deserts of the Southwest.
I wanted to know if this was beginning to change. Might Americans finally be waking up to how climate is about to transform their lives? And if so — if a great domestic relocation might be in the offing — was it possible to project where we might go? To answer these questions, I interviewed more than four dozen experts: economists and demographers, climate scientists and insurance executives, architects and urban planners, and I mapped out the danger zones that will close in on Americans over the next 30 years. The maps for the first time combined exclusive climate data from the Rhodium Group, an independent data-analytics firm; wildfire projections modeled by United States Forest Service researchers and others; and data about America’s shifting climate niches, an evolution of work first published by The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences last spring. (See a detailed analysis of the maps.)
What I found was a nation on the cusp of a great transformation. Across the United States, some 162 million people — nearly one in two — will most likely experience a decline in the quality of their environment, namely more heat and less water. For 93 million of them, the changes could be particularly severe, and by 2070, our analysis suggests, if carbon emissions rise at extreme levels, at least four million Americans could find themselves living at the fringe, in places decidedly outside the ideal niche for human life. The cost of resisting the new climate reality is mounting. Florida officials have already acknowledged that defending some roadways against the sea will be unaffordable. And the nation’s federal flood-insurance program is for the first time requiring that some of its payouts be used to retreat from climate threats across the country. It will soon prove too expensive to maintain the status quo.
Then what?
(via trixclibrarian)
seriouslyrndmstuff liked this
moomymoo liked this
psychedelicflower liked this
le-petit-alouette reblogged this from sunken-standard sunken-standard reblogged this from ecology-and-revolution
ecology-and-revolution reblogged this from solarpunkfuturenow
potatoshoe liked this
gayberdnird liked this
gayberdnird reblogged this from minementis
iwocrack reblogged this from keebiekneebiez keebiekneebiez reblogged this from solarpunkfuturenow
negasonicbabes reblogged this from arathergrimreaper
negasonicbabes liked this minementis reblogged this from subversivelystitched
oldhauntsforgottenghosts liked this
starwarsrefs reblogged this from subversivelystitched
chubby-elf-hux liked this
sharpandpointies said:
@surroundedbybooks I understand.
Do everything you, personally, can. And vote. And pressure corporations.
But certainly do whatever you, yourself can do because it isn’t just 100 corporations no matter how many times people will misinterpret that study (which also didn’t take animal agriculture into account).
We must try, hopeless as it might seem. immortalbeigewizard liked this
palindrom3 liked this
sharpandpointies liked this arathergrimreaper reblogged this from subversivelystitched
neigeunderfireworks88 liked this
subversivelystitched reblogged this from hater-of-terfs
airedelalmena liked this bobbyjean liked this
chaos-coming reblogged this from catsnuggler
chaos-coming liked this
hella-nonbinary-witch-punk liked this
catsnuggler reblogged this from teachanarchy teachanarchy reblogged this from gynandromorphia
joseph-lavode reblogged this from truth-has-a-liberal-bias
awkwardteenprints liked this
hairasuntouchedaspartoftheamazon reblogged this from master7mindd
hairasuntouchedaspartoftheamazon liked this
master7mindd reblogged this from teachanarchy tauganra liked this
totallynotdead liked this
dannyketch reblogged this from stupid-dyke
noble-kale reblogged this from stupid-dyke
noble-kale liked this
red-will liked this
thujafantastica reblogged this from rjzimmerman
thujafantastica liked this
stupid-dyke reblogged this from jeezypetes - Show more notes