
New map reveals US cities and landmarks set to disappear by 2050
Countless wildlife conservation parks throughout the US are also expected to sink, and beachfront communities along the Gulf and East Coast will likely shrink as sea levels wash away the coastline. The new map also allows users to look at the best and worst case scenarios based on major flood predictions and pollution's impact on the climate, according to data from a 2021 report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Long Island, Atlantic City, New Orleans and San Jose are all in the US danger zone even in the most conservative estimates by Climate Central. Here are several of the major cities that could submerge under rising sea levels by 2050.
New Orleans, Louisiana
The iconic Gulf Coast city has been in the crosshairs of climate alarmists for decades. The new map revealed that New Orleans, home to more than 360,000 people, will likely see the entire city sitting below the annual flood level. This means that, based on Climate Central's sea level rise projections and coastal elevation models, the city is expected to sink below the elevation at which flooding is likely to occur at least once per year. Simply put, even a normal flood in a year without extreme storms will submerge the whole city since nothing will be left above sea level in 2050.
Cape Coral, Florida
This southwestern Florida city is known for its many canals, but this also makes it one of the major projected victims of climate change-related sea level rise. Climate Central's map predicts that, by 2050, all of the local waterways that line the streets will rise up and erode much of the waterfront property these Floridians enjoy. Cape Coral is home to more than 220,000 people. Its low-lying areas are at high risk of being below annual flood level in 2050, even under moderate climate emissions scenarios projected by Climate Central. The city has also been struck by multiple hurricanes in recent years, including Hurricane Helene in 2024 and Hurricane Irma in 2017.
Savannah, Georgia
Charleston, South Carolina
Charleston has become a major tourism hub over the years, but the new map predicts that much of the historic city's well-preserved architecture will sink into dangerous flood zones within three decades. Charleston faces regular flooding from storm surges, heavy rain and king tides - exceptionally high tides that occur when the gravitational forces of the moon and sun align.
In 1989, Hurricane Hugo caused $2.8 billion in damage, and recent storms like Matthew and Irma brought significant flooding as well. Sitting on a peninsula in South Carolina, the 2050 forecast projects that Charleston will see a sea level rise that floods areas along all three edges of the city.
Atlantic City, New Jersey
East Rutherford, New Jersey
Speaking of New Jersey, even some more inland locations are at risk of severe sinking and flooding over the next 25 years. Located along the Hackensack River and less than 10 miles from New York City, East Rutherford has become known for two major attractions: the American Dream Mall and MetLife Stadium. Both venues sit on the Meadowlands, a large ecosystem of wetlands, marshes and tidal areas in northern New Jersey. According to the 2050 projections from Climate Central, that means the NFL's New York Jets and New York Giants will see their stadium sitting underwater within 30 years as the entire area is expected to fall under the annual flood level.
Long Island, New York
Although Long Island is so big that it has over a dozen cities and towns scattered across two counties, the entire coastline of this major New York landmass could be washed away by 2050. In 2012, Hurricane Sandy devastated the East Coast, causing widespread flooding throughout Long Island with damages surpassing $20 billion. In the latest projections for 2050, almost all of the small landmasses connecting the island's many vacation spots - including Fire Island and Jones Beach - will be underwater. Home to nearly 3 million people, coastal communities in Long Island's Babylon, Lindenhurst, Amityville, Massapequa, Freeport and Oceanside will also be affected by the rising sea levels eroding local beaches and beachfront property.
San Jose, California
On the West Coast, Climate Central's interactive map actually predicted little to no sea level rise and flooding throughout California. One area that did not escape the projected impact of climate change, however, was San Jose, which sits at the southern end of the San Francisco Bay. The 2050 projection warns that San Jose's Bayfront areas will be at risk of submerging in a flood. That includes the area around Levi's Stadium, home of the NFL's San Francisco 49ers. While Climate Central's forecast was kind to most of California, other recent studies have not been.
Researchers at the Virginia Institute of Marine Science (VIMS) revealed that Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Diego and Alameda are all among the coastal cities that have seen their local sea levels rise since 2018. Rising sea levels and continued land erosion threaten to exacerbate flooding and subsidence (sinking of the ground) in these areas. Their new data showed that San Diego is experiencing the highest amount of sea level rise along the entire West Coast, rising 2.6 millimeters a year. By 2050, all four of these cities are predicted to see their local sea levels rise several inches above the projected average for that year.
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Daily Mail
5 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Iconic 'sinking city' home to over 300,000 Americans faces terrifying new threat
An iconic American city already sinking at an alarming rate now faces a fresh threat as a monster storm approaches the Gulf Coast, threatening heavy rain and flash flooding. New Orleans is sinking by up to 2 inches a year as its marshy clay soil compresses under the weight of buildings. This ongoing subsidence is compounded now by a surge of tropical moisture brought by tropical weather system Invest 93L, increasing the risk of flash floods and putting additional strain on the city's drainage systems. 'Much of the infrastructure and drainage systems were designed for rainfall patterns typical of 50 to 100 years ago,' Dan DePodwin, vice president of forecast operations at AccuWeather, told the Daily Mail. 'It is not for the intense and extreme rainfall events we are experiencing right now.' Forecasters are also monitoring the system as it moves north, dragging deep tropical moisture into the central US. The National Weather Service (NWS) has predicted the system will churn through Arkansas by Saturday, then bring repeated thunderstorms to the Midwest and Ohio Valley into early next week. This puts more than 30 million Americans across 11 states under the threat of flash flooding through the weekend. A major tropical rainstorm brought heavy rain to New Orleans (pictured), an area of the US that is sinking at a concerning rate (Stock Image) Volunteers filled sandbags for New Orleans residents on July 16, 2025, before heavy rains the Gulf Coast storm arrived Areas south and west of New Orleans have been projected to be flooded with up to 8 inches of rain due to the storm 'This has been a tremendously impactful and dangerous year,' AccuWeather meteorologist Jonathan Porter said regarding nationwide flooding tragedies. 'The number of flash flood reports this year to date has been a staggering 70 percent above the 10-year historical average.' Earlier this week, the system dumped nearly 8 inches of rain in Pierre Part, over 6 inches in Little Woods and close to 6 inches in New Orleans' Desire neighborhood. On Friday, radar showed the storm's core largely remaining south of New Orleans, with only light showers reaching the city. The worst of the weather stayed offshore. The NWS lowered its rainfall forecast to a range of just 1.5 to 2 inches through Saturday, from an earlier prediction of 4 to 8 inches. As of now, no street flooding has been reported in New Orleans or Jefferson Parish. Alex DaSilva, AccuWeather's lead hurricane expert, told the Daily Mail, 'The tropical rainstorm, once labeled Invest 93L, has lost its structure. But leftover moisture is still capable of triggering localized flash floods across Louisiana through Saturday.' New Orleans (pictured) is home to more than 360,000 people, but much of the city is below sea level A Virginia Tech study has estimated that up to 225,000 people are at risk of death or displacement in sinking coastal communities (Stock Image) Now pushing into the Midwest, the remnants of Invest 93L are colliding with a stalled weather front stretching from Iowa to West Virginia. This setup is expected to bring repeated rounds of heavy thunderstorms through early next week, raising flash flood risks across parts of the Midwest, Ohio Valley and Appalachians. According to AccuWeather, cities such as Chicago, Indianapolis and Pittsburgh could receive 2 to 4 inches of rain by Monday, with isolated spots potentially seeing over a foot. 'The ample moisture from the tropical rainstorm is expected to be drawn northward,' DePodwin said. 'The flooding could be significant in places that have already been soaked this month.' Experts warn that saturated soils and swollen creeks could lead to rapid water rises in some areas, especially where rainfall rates reach 1 to 3 inches per hour. 'We're increasingly concerned about the risk of flooding through the weekend as the moisture from this tropical rainstorm surges northward,' DaSilva warned. 'Some already waterlogged areas could receive another 4 to 8 inches of rain.' The tropical rainstorm impacting Louisiana also threatens to bring flash flooding to parts of the Midwest, Ohio Valley and Appalachians Where rainfall rates reach 1 to 3 inches per hour, forecasters caution of 'life-threatening flash flooding', landslides and overwhelmed drainage systems. Porter advised, 'Don't let your guard down. People should be prepared to move to higher ground if they receive a flash flood warning.' Although Invest 93L never developed into a named storm, it has nonetheless caused widespread damage. Meanwhile, forecasters are tracking another potential storm near the Gulf, which was expected to develop starting July 21. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) anticipates up to 19 named storms this season, including 10 hurricanes - of which, as many as five are expected to be categorized as major - that could impact the US.


The Guardian
5 hours ago
- The Guardian
Century-old dam under strain as floods increase in US and federal funds dry up
More than 18,000 properties that sit downstream of a series of a century-old Ohio dam are at risk of flooding over the next three decades, according to climate data, as the Trump administration continues to roll back investments that would aid in keeping the waters at bay. In a part of the US that's largely flat, the view from above the Huffman dam in south-west Ohio is rare. From the bike trail atop the dam, the shimmering lights of downtown Dayton appear to the south. Cargo planes from a nearby air force base circle overhead and water from the 66-mile-long Mad River gushes underfoot. But the dam serves a far more pressing purpose: holding back up to 54bn gallons of water – enough to fill 82,000 Olympic-size swimming pools – during flooding events. Nearby, more than 21% of all properties downstream are at risk of flooding over the next three decades, according to First Street, a climate risk data modeling organization. That percentage accounts for 18,596 properties in Dayton. The five massive dry dams and 55 miles of levees west and north of Dayton were built in the aftermath of catastrophic destruction that befell the Ohio city in 1913, when 360 people died and flooding in three rivers that meet in the city center wiped out the downtown area. But today, it and many other communities around the midwest are once again at risk of flooding. 'Our system has experienced 2,170 storage events. The flood in April ranked 12th,' says MaryLynn Lodor, general manager of the Miami Conservancy District, the authority overseeing the regional flood prevention system that includes the Huffman Dam. The flooding early last April saw five to seven inches of rain inundate homes, roads and parks, and caused power outages for thousands of people across hundreds of miles. Extreme precipitation events are happening with increasing regularity at a time when, across a region that's home to the country's two major, high-discharge waterways – the Ohio and Mississippi rivers – decades-old flood prevention infrastructure is falling apart. From Indiana, where authorities in charge of a dam at a youth camp that sees 15,000 visitors annually warned of failure during last April's flooding, to Illinois and Minnesota, reports are appearing with increasing regularity of '100-year' floods threatening the integrity of, and in some cases destroying, dams. Five years ago, the Edenville Dam in central Michigan failed following days of heavy rain, prompting the evacuation of 10,000 people and the failure of another dam downstream. The dam is situated at the confluence of two rivers, and in 2018 its owner temporarily had its license taken away due to fears it couldn't pass enough water at high flood levels. Lawsuits and an expense report of $250m followed the dam failure. Data from Michigan's department of environment, Great Lakes and energy, found that of the state's recorded 2,552 dams, nearly 18% were rated as in 'fair', 'poor' or 'unsatisfactory' condition. Despite this, little change has been enacted in Michigan. 'The reason this is popping up everywhere in the country is because it's a massive ageing infrastructure problem,' says Bryan Burroughs, a member of a now-closed state taskforce that sought to investigate the status of dams across Michigan following the Edenville incident. He says the taskforce's recommendations have largely not been enacted. 'To date, the only ones that have been taken up and addressed to any level are the ones that our state department of environment, Great Lakes and energy are able to oversee themselves. Regulatory changes have not been picked up legislatively,' Burroughs continued. Through the Inflation Reduction Act, the Biden administration had made investing in America's ageing infrastructure over the course of many years a priority, with $10bn dedicated to flooding mitigation and drought relief. An additional $3bn was allocated in 2021 through the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act for dam safety, removal and related upgrades. Since Donald Trump entered the White House in January, the administration has vowed to roll back much of those investments. Hundreds of dam safety and other staffers working at dams in 17 western states have been laid off in recent months. Before the 4 July flood disaster in Texas, the Trump administration had pledged to close the Federal Emergency Management Agency (Fema). With more than 92,000 dams across the country, the Society of Civil Engineers estimates the cost of repairing the country's non-federal dams at $165bn. In Ohio, the Miami Conservancy District has been outspoken in highlighting that the dams it is responsible for are in need of repair – in particular, the upstream walls of two north of the city of Dayton. Levees it manages 'are subject to the costly, federally mandated Fema accreditation process, but there is no adequate funding source.' Last year, the district said it needs $140m to bring the region's dams and levees up to safe levels over the coming decades. Over the past 80 years, the organization has seen a 228% increase in the volume of water its dams store, meaning the structures today must work harder than they did in the past to hold back the water. 'As we're looking at having to make reinvestments, we are looking to try to secure some funding through the state and federal governments,' says Lodor. 'We have not gotten much support and federal dollars or state money to be able to do the system. It's already been invested in by the local communities; it would be very difficult for this to be on the backs of the locals.' Many dams hold back water that's used by fishers and recreators – an issue that's creating tension in many communities. In White Cloud, Michigan, authorities have had to draw down much of the lake water behind a 150-year-old dam due to fears for its structural integrity, angering locals. As in Texas, dozens of youth groups and Christian camps across the midwest use lakes and waterways downstream of ageing lowhead and other dams for programming and outdoor activities. Emails and messages left by the Guardian with the owners of an at-risk dam at a camp in Indiana used by thousands of children every year received no response. While compared with other parts of the US the midwest does not have a lot of dams whose main purpose is for flood control due to geological and topographical reasons, Ohio and much of the wider midwest have seen 'record-setting rain' this year. 'The weather has changed,' says Burroughs. 'What used to be a one-in-100-year flood event might have happened three times in the last 40 years.'


The Independent
7 hours ago
- The Independent
More than 100 million Americans to swelter in triple digit heat as new ‘heat dome' arrives
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