Floods threaten to shut down a quarter of U.S. roads and critical buildings
A quarter of the roads in the United States would be
impassable during a flood, according to a new study by First Street Foundation
that looks at flooding threats to the country's critical infrastructure.
The report estimates that more than 2 million miles of road
are at risk from floods. It also says that floods could shut down a quarter of
critical buildings and facilities, including airports, hospitals, government
buildings, houses of worship, museums and schools. First Street's study arrives
after a summer of floods that killed dozens of people in the U.S. and destroyed
billions of dollars worth of infrastructure.
What communities are most at risk? The report identifies
regions with "well established flood risk," like flood plains along
the Gulf of Mexico and Southeastern coast. But First Street's risk assessment
also provides city and county level insights for every state and Washington
D.C. "We're capturing a lot more flooding in places that traditionally you
wouldn't think of as high flood risk areas like West Virginia and eastern
Kentucky,", says Jeremy Porter, head of research and development at First
Street, a non-profit, technology-focused research group.
The report — First Street's third national assessment of
flood risk — builds on its past findings about residential properties. These
new findings for roads, critical buildings and commercial properties are even
more pressing, Porter says.
"We found actually 25% of all critical infrastructure
was at risk across the country, whereas only about 14% of residential
properties were at risk," Porter says. Of all the property types, he adds,
"residential properties were actually the least at risk."
Those risks to infrastructure will only worsen with time as
floods get more frequent and severe because of extreme precipitation and sea
level rise fueled by climate change.
First Street found that, while 2 million miles of roads
today are affected now, the number is expected to jump to 2.2 million miles in
30 years. Commercial properties can expect a 7% increase in risk associated
with flooding between 2021 to 2051. There are 35,776 critical infrastructure
facilities at risk today from flooding, according to the study. That number
would jump to 37,786 facilities by 2051.
A handful of measures to protect roads and building
infrastructure from flooding are included in two key pieces of legislation
mired in Congress: the $1 trillion infrastructure bill and a $3.5 trillion
budget reconciliation package.
But federal funding is just one component, Porter says.
Resources like First Street's Flood Factor tool, which allows people to find
their property's risk of flooding along with future projections, can help
Americans act proactively. And big cities are already monitoring their flood
risk. But smaller communities will need more help to step up flood protection.
"Miami, New York, they have the money, they have
engineers, they can do a lot of this stuff themselves. But the vast majority of
communities around the country don't have any idea of what their risk is,"
Porter says. "Part of this infrastructure bill is, there's a climate
component to it, but there's also a [need] that communities understand their
risk and apply for the funds" that Congress is trying to pass.
Source NPR
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