America's largest cities are at the forefront of climate change.
after the remnants of Hurricane Ida caused flash flooding in major cities along the East Coast.
The prevalence of concrete also contributes to the flooding, as there is no soil to help absorb the excess water, Madajewicz said. The lack of wetlands and dunes in coastal areas that have been heavily developed, such as the Rockaways in Queens, make those neighborhoods more susceptible to flooding, especially when a major storm comes in, likeA person makes their way in rainfall from the remnants of Hurricane Ida, Sept. 1, 2021, in the Bronx borough of New York City.About 1.
The food supply could even be interrupted because there are only so many access points in which sustenance can be shipped in, Madajewicz said. A woman looks on as she stands outside of his flooded home after heavy rain in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., April 13, 2023.Conversely, places like Phoenix will be even more dry and deserted, due to an increase of drought, the researchers found.Eva Marie Uzcategui/Bloomberg via Getty Images, FILE
The Big Apple has already started implementing infrastructure improvements that will protect its residents from future extreme events, but the work is nowhere near finished, Madajewicz said.in 2021 that take climate change into account, such as requiring all new construction to be above base flood elevation and take various other flood considerations into account.
Caution tape is seen at a construction site near saguaro cactus at the Phoenix botanical gardens in Phoenix, Aug. 1, 2023.But other large cities may not have the same resources or as sizeable a budget as New York, and the challenge will be to prioritize those transformations before it's too late, Madajewicz said. In Miami and other costal cities in Florida, city planners have prioritized the installation of stormwater pumps, for instance.
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