Post-Tropical Storm Hermine is poised to deliver the Mid-Atlantic
states a fierce blow, with days of strong winds, pounding waves and
storm surge-related coastal flooding.
Yet while the path of Hermine and height of its surge gets most of
the attention, there's a hidden, human-caused and long-term factor at
work here too: Sea level rise is making all coastal flooding events in
the Mid-Atlantic region more frequent and worse.
Globally, sea levels are rising at the fastest rate of any time in at least the past 2,800 years, according to a study published in February. This is due to warming ocean waters, which cause the sea to expand, and the melting of polar ice caps.
The Mid-Atlantic happens to be located in a so-called sea level rise
"hotspot," meaning that seas are rising faster there — and are predicted
to continue doing so — than they are in other parts of the U.S., and
indeed other areas of the globe.
The hotspot is due to a combination of things which include land
subsidence, involving the slow settling of land over time, as well as
ocean currents like the Gulf Stream.
The end result is a sharp uptick in "nuisance" coastal flooding
events, which often take place even on sunny days, from Virginia to
Massachusetts. The hotspot also boosts the flood potential from major
storms, including Hermine.
For example, a report
published in February from the nonprofit research and journalism group
Climate Central found a startling increase in nuisance flooding events
in recent decades.
For the Climate Central analysis, researchers took hourly water level
records from 27 different tide gauges at U.S. coastal locations, and
removed the human-caused component in global sea level from them.
This resulted in a history of what water levels should have been absent any global warming-related sea level rise.
The group found that out of 8,726 days when unaltered water level
observations exceeded National Weather Service local “nuisance” flood
thresholds for minor impacts, such as flooding of coastal roads, 5,809
days would not have exceeded those thresholds if the global warming
component of sea level rise were removed.
In other words, about two-thirds of the 8,726 total flood days
identified in the report could be said to be human-caused due to climate
change.
In other words, about two-thirds of the 8,726 total flood days
identified in the report could be said to be human-caused due to climate
change
For example, in Annapolis, Maryland, the study found that the number
of nuisance flood days have increased from 193 to 701 days between the
first half of the 1951 to 2014 period and the second half.
That works out to an increase of 508 nuisance flood days. The study
found that about 394, or nearly 78 percent, of these flood days would
not have occurred if it weren't for global warming-related sea level
rise.
While that nuisance flooding is increasing, major storms are hitting
that ordinarily would be damaging, but in the new era of higher sea
levels can be even more deadly.
This is where Hermine comes in.
Hermine is far more than a nuisance flood
The National Hurricane Center warned Saturday that Post-Tropical
Storm Hermine could bring "life-threatening" storm surge inundation
(meaning water on top of land that would normally be dry ground at the
time of high tide) that could reach a maximum of 3 to 5 feet from
Chincoteague, Virginia to Sandy Hook, New Jersey. This includes the
entirety of the Delaware, Maryland and New Jersey coastlines.
The agency is also forecasting at least 2 to 4 feet of inundation
from Sandy Hook north to Bridgeport, Connecticut, including the New York
City metro area.
Storm surge is caused by a storm's low pressure and strong winds that
pile water toward the coastline, causing water levels to rise, usually
reaching a peak around the time of high tide.
Storm surge in Lower Manhattan from Hurricane Sandy, showing portion attributable to climate change.
Image: NCAR
Due
to sea level rise, this storm surge is riding atop a higher background
level of water, meaning that it is easier to flood the coastline today
than it was before human-caused sea level rise became so apparent.
Some sea level rise experts compare this factor to a basketball
player being able to make more dunks when he or she jumps from a rising
basketball court.
When Hurricane Sandy hit in 2012, for example, the sea level at the Battery
in lower Manhattan was about 11 inches higher than it was in 1900,
which meant that the total inundation from the storm was worse than it
would have been had the storm hit a century earlier.
The same will be true for Hermine, and every other storm to come, as
the floor that storm surge's are riding on top of continues to rise.
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