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applegrove

(118,824 posts)
Wed Oct 14, 2015, 05:52 PM Oct 2015

I watch all the "Beachfront Bargan" house hunting shows. Just occured to me that all those

people who are buying homes along the coastal US, Caribbean and Florida keys are going to be underwater and worthless when the families want to sell them. They are not investment properties at all.

Want To Know How Sea Level Rise Will Impact Your Hometown? There’s A Map For That

by Natasha Geiling at Think Progress

http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2015/10/14/3711861/sea-level-rise-climate-central-map/

"SNIP..............


If you want to know whether your city has the potential to be underwater due to rising sea levels, there’s now a map for that.

In conjunction with research published Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Climate Central launched ‘Mapping Choices,’ an interactive tool that lets users compare sea level rise in different cities based on various carbon scenarios, from aggressive carbon cuts to unchecked pollution.

“I think we read a lot of projections about future temperature increases or impact, but it can be hard to understand what they really mean,” Ben Strauss, vice president for sea level and climate impacts at Climate Central and lead author of the study, told ThinkProgress. “We wanted to do a research project that would literally give people a picture, or a map, of the different outcomes that we could see. This is a story that can have different endings, and the endings depend on what we do.”

If left unchecked, carbon pollution could lead to between 14 and 33 feet of long-term global sea level rise, the study found. That magnitude of sea level rise would threaten to submerge land that is currently home to between 20 and 31 million Americans, including at least 20 major U.S. cities with more than 100,000 residents. With aggressive carbon cuts, the study found, half of these cities could be spared from rising seas — but major cities like New Orleans and Miami are likely to be permanently threatened by rising sea level even with aggressive action on climate change.



...............SNIP"

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Human101948

(3,457 posts)
1. My town was already underwater during Sandy
Wed Oct 14, 2015, 06:05 PM
Oct 2015

So now everybody is jacking up their homes. Of course, we may soon have to commute by canoe, but what the heck!

sue4e3

(731 posts)
4. I was just going to say there s a whole town a few miles away from me
Wed Oct 14, 2015, 06:42 PM
Oct 2015

that's a ghost town from sandy and because of prospective water encroachment the state bought out, for some crap price and are calling it a sanctuary

Warpy

(111,367 posts)
2. "Maps will be released in November"
Wed Oct 14, 2015, 06:10 PM
Oct 2015

I imagine it will show my former house on Cape Cod on a new island, it was on high ground. It will be surrounded by water, along with a dozen other houses. I still wouldn't consider it a good real estate buy.

I live a mile up in the high desert now. What I fear is that this region will become like another Atacama, all the rainfall diverted far north of here, no winter snowpack, and maybe a shower every five years or so to make surviving seeds bloom for a week.

phantom power

(25,966 posts)
3. I've been curious for a long time when the music effectively stops
Wed Oct 14, 2015, 06:26 PM
Oct 2015

I believe that the music will stop when some sufficient number of people start genuinely believing that "every property at <= x feet above sea level is doomed in my lifetime" Which is, in theory, before the property is actually doomed.

Either way, one of these days some property owners are going to be stuck with properties that are either drowning, or that they can't sell because people know they will and won't buy. It's mostly a question (imo) of when acceptance of this reaches critical mass with the real estate market.

applegrove

(118,824 posts)
5. It is like big oil isn't it? Developers making money and building on doomed land till the public
Wed Oct 14, 2015, 07:13 PM
Oct 2015

gets wise. And they keep supporting the GOP to keep people dumb and buying in the mean time.

 

truebluegreen

(9,033 posts)
6. It's not just about how far above sea level a given house is,
Wed Oct 14, 2015, 07:24 PM
Oct 2015

since as a rule much of the infrastructure that makes it habitable is below ground.

applegrove

(118,824 posts)
7. It is a real estate bubble. And perhaps the rich want enough time to unload their properties
Wed Oct 14, 2015, 09:30 PM
Oct 2015

before the public get wise. The richer you are, the better real estate agent you can find.

 

SheilaT

(23,156 posts)
8. Building on the shore has always been a risky proposition.
Wed Oct 14, 2015, 10:44 PM
Oct 2015

People really ought to be paying the appropriate insurance rates, and if the house gets washed away, no federal help.

It's hardly breaking news that even without sea levels rising that major storms can destroy much of what's built on the shore.

 

Nihil

(13,508 posts)
9. "There's a sucker born every minute"
Thu Oct 15, 2015, 04:36 AM
Oct 2015

Smart people (especially unscrupulous ones) will continue to get rich
from stupid people until the species is extinct.



As long as the government doesn't go and bail the suckers out when
it floods, view it as a somewhat inefficient means of population reduction.


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