January 19, 2009
Sea Level Rise and it’s Mid-Atlantic Region Implications
It’s amazing what you can find out there if you just look in the right places. I just read a report on the EPA’s website about sea-level rising and it’s impact on us right here in S.C.
Some highlights:
- * Rising water levels are already an important factor in submerging low-lying lands, eroding beaches, converting wetlands to open water, and exacerbating coastal flooding. All of these effects will be increased if the rate of sea-level rise accelerates in the future.
- * Most coastal wetlands in the mid-Atlantic would be lost if sea level rises one meter in the next century. Even a 50-cm rise would threaten most wetlands along the Eastern Shore of Chesapeake Bay.
- * Possible responses to sea level rise include seawalls, bulkheads, and other shoreline armoring; elevating buildings and land surfaces (including beaches and wetlands); and allowing shorelines to change and moving structures out of harm’s way. Those three approaches have very different environmental and social impacts.
- * Preparing now can reduce the eventual environmental and economic impacts of sea level rise.
- * Some governmental and non-governmental organizations are already starting to prepare for sea level rise.
You can read the full report at Coastal Sensitivity to Sea-level Rise.
September 22, 2008
Rising Seas: Challenges and Opportunities for South Carolina
The Southern Alliance for Clean Energy (SACE) created the following video which illustrates the impact rising sea levels have on the Charleston area:




