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The sinking city: New York’s vulnerability to climate change

One of New York’s urban legends has made it the “city that never sleeps”. Above all, a scientific study has just shown that the “Big Apple” is sinking under its own weight.

Scientists know with certainty since Hurricane Sandy of October 29, 2012 that this urban giant with such a particular geography – the island of Manhattan is framed by the Atlantic Ocean, the East River and the Hudson River – is particularly vulnerable. to storms, floods and wave-submersion caused by climate change.

That is the equivalent of more than 75,000 Eiffel towers.

Under this force, the cultural and economic capital of the United States, populated by 8.5 million souls, is sinking an average of one to two millimeters per year.

In some neighborhoods where buildings have been built on softer or artificial ground, subsidence could even reach 4.5 mm per year, according to the study. But building fewer concrete, glass and steel towers won’t change that, warns the study’s lead author, Tom Parsons.

“The root cause of the subsidence of New York and the East Coast is tectonic and cannot be stemmed,” the American geophysicist told AFP. And this subsidence should accelerate the impact of rising waters caused by global warming and the melting of glaciers.

According to the organization Sea Level Rise.org, the water level in New York has risen 23 centimeters compared to 1950 and the municipality predicts that it will rise another 20 to 75 cm by 2050, or even 1, 8 m before 2100 and repeated storms.

In response, the city made the fortification of its 836 kilometers of coastline a priority. A titanic plan of 20 billion dollars, dubbed “climate resilience”, has been launched with Herculean work to protect itself from the waters.

In the south of Manhattan, between the East River and an expressway, the city has been erecting a wall and dikes since 2021, and raises a green space over 4 km. Where Sandy raised the water 2.7m more than 10 years ago.

JForum.fr & AFP

2023-06-01 09:42:23
#York #sinking #weight #JForum

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