Category Archives: Climate Change

Fun & Sun in the “Venice of the South”

View of San Marco Basin, Gaspar van Wittel, 1697

Later this week I am off to Venice, Italy to meet with academics and government officials there as part of my Ph.D. research related to protecting South Florida from sea level rise. I am excited to learn about what that city and region is doing to combat our climate crisis, including their Modulo Sperimentale Elettromeccanico (aka MOSE) mobile sea level and tidal barrier gates that are designed to protect Venice and the Venetian Lagoon, and their various ongoing efforts to install coastal reinforcement, lagoon improvements, and raise the land around the water’s edge. I look forward to sharing what I learn about what’s happening in “The Floating City,” as it’s nicknamed, but before I leave I wanted to talk about a place much closer home, a place that’s been called the “Venice of the South.”

Galveston, Texas sits on the shores of the Gulf of Mexico, less than 60 miles from Houston in a region that’s home to over 7,500,000 people. Whether it’s weather, population, traffic, language, or, yes, climate change, the greater Galveston/Houston region sure seems to have a lot in common with South Florida. And, as you are about to read, the threat of sea level rise there, like here in South Florida, presents costly and complex challenges that have no simple solutions but offer our region important lessons.

Of great concern in the “Venice of the South” is a recent analysis of tide-gauge and satellite data that has been measuring sea levels in the region since 2010, which finds that the Gulf of Mexico’s waters have risen twice as fast there as the global average. America’s space agency, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), published similarly concerning data last year when it predicted that Galveston sea levels could rise by an estimated 18 inches by 2040 and that the region could experience over 250 days of flooding per year by 2050 (you can learn more about NASA’s sea rise data here).

Other than England’s shoreline along the North Sea, the results on the coast in Galveston appear to be the second fastest place on the planet for sea rise over that period of time and it’s easily the largest increase here in the United States at 8.4 inches. Again, that’s an increase of 8.4 inches just since 2010. Here are the top three (four, since third place was a tie) largest increases and their location in the US during that time frame:

  1. Galveston, Texas: 8.4 inches
  2. Charleston, South Carolina: 7.1 inches
  3. Jacksonville, Florida: 6 inches (Tie)
  4. Miami, Florida: 6 inches (Tie)

Researchers at Texas A&M University have, for example, been using modern mapping tools and collecting data to understand the impacts and influencers of the rising seas in the Galveston area. Tidal data, for example, from a gauge in place since 1908 at Pier 21 on Galveston Island has measured a rise in sea level of about two feet since it was installed. Researchers estimate that about one foot of that total, thus half, is due to land subsidence caused by groundwater withdrawal, oil and gas extraction, and surface sediments compacting. The other half is caused by the warming of our atmosphere and oceans over that same time period which, in turn, melts glacier and sea ice which increases sea levels.

When it comes to our climate crisis and sea rise, South Florida has a lot more in common with the Galveston/Houston region than just making the “top” three list above. One study I’ve read concluded that 17% of the wetlands in Galveston have been lost since 1954. What was once marshlands filled with saltwater have been drained, filled in, and developed. Sounds an awful lot like what’s happened in South Florida along our coastline to our east (much less to the west as development creeps towards the Everglades). The wetlands of Galveston, like our precious mangrove forests here in South Florida, are highly effective natural barriers against tropical weather including hurricanes and flooding, that should be protected from development at all costs but that are constantly under threat by developers ever eager to build along the water’s edge.

Fighting back against the sea is also not a new phenomenon in Galveston any more than it is here in South Florida. You see, in September of 1900 a catastrophic hurricane hit the region and sadly killed over 6,000 people. In 1902, in response, Galveston implemented laws that required the then existing buildings to be raised and famously also built a 17-foot tall, three mile long seawall that has since been expanded to about ten miles long. The Galveston seawall is so well known in the region that the Visitor’s Bureau there touts it (I am not making this up, as humorist Dave Barry used to write) as a vacation “hot spot” for “some fun in the sun.”

The “fun” aside, locals there and from the State of Texas have concluded that the seawall and other historic steps they’ve taken over the decades are no longer effective in a world where manmade climate change is rapidly rising sea levels and threaten not just Galveston but the City of Houston. And today, as is happening in Venice, Italy with the installation of the MOSE gate system, modern Galveston is trying to combat sea level rise with a range of new and old resilience initiatives in hopes of again protecting its community and Houston beyond.

For example, just as South Florida is slowly working on various coastal resiliency plans to try to protect our region including partnering with the US Army Corps of Engineer’s (USACE) on the so called Miami-Dade Back Bay Study, the folks in the Galveston/Houston area are likewise working with the Army Corps on a truly massive plan to install more (and higher) flood walls, flood gates, levees, 18 miles of double sand dunes, and other steps over the next two decades along the Texas coast. Galveston’s plan, nicknamed the “Ike Dike,” following 2008’s Hurricane Ike that hit that region, has an initially estimated $57 billion cost and will be the largest project in the history of the Army Corps of Engineers.

As with South Florida, as seas rise it is increasingly clear that existing developments along the Texas coast will require more continual and increasingly costly fortifications. Rising seas there also increase the level of ground water that, in turn, erodes the foundations of homes and buildings, threatens infrastructure including septic systems, and increases so called “sunny day” flooding throughout the year in ways that make conducting normal daily activities anywhere from challenging to impossible. Whether it’s perpetual beach replenishment to artificially perpetuate the “fun in the sun” or things like raising roads, sidewalks, and other critical infrastructure, it’s increasingly clear that such plans and their cost are becoming controversial. To many folks the idea of pouring more sand, and money, into the same problem no longer seems to make sense.

Speaking of coastal development, we find yet another similarity between Galveston and South Florida. Developers love to build buildings, especially high rises, along the water’s edge for many reasons including the beach access they afford and that the views command premium prices from buyers. And, understandably, people love to live in them. Governments love the tax dollars they generate too and because of this, elected leaders are often willing to bend rules and regulations to accommodate “just one more” building on the sand. Unfortunately, the beach sand in Galveston, as with South Florida, has the pesky habit of being washed into the sea starting the moment it’s replenished and perpetually fixing that issue comes at a high cost. There’s also the issue of the costly renovations needed to raise roads and infrastructure out of harm’s way to allow owners access to their buildings. All of these types of steps have many in Texas understandably starting to question whether the seemingly endless use of public money should be spent on what increasingly seem to be foolish pursuits as seas rise higher.

And speaking of business parallels, I sense a connection related to the energy industry too. You see, Houston, just a few miles up the road from coastal Galveston where climate change is causing havoc, is touted as the “Energy Capital of the World” and is home to nearly 5,000 energy-oriented businesses. That includes almost 50 of the top 100 public oil and gas production companies, as well as 13 of the 20 largest natural gas companies. And here in Florida I can’t think of a more powerful, politically connected industry than our monopolistic electric utilities: businesses that source an astounding 81% of their power from fossil fuels such as natural gas and coal, the very products (along with oil) that are causing earth’s climate to warm and seas to rise.

Many people are beginning to find it sadly, sickly ironic that an ostensibly endless stream of public money is being spent to battle rising sea levels caused by climate change while state governments in both Texas and Florida so openly embrace and perpetuate the actual polluters causing the problem. Rather than pouring more and more public money into an endless stream of sand and other band aid measures, it sure seems to make sense that we should be trying to address the cause of the predicament by exhibiting the leadership desperately needed to transition these economies to clean, sustainable energy.

Like I said, the Venice of the South has a lot in common with South Florida including that “fun in the sun” thing. The question is will either state ever take the steps our environment and society need to fully transition to sustainability or is all of that “fun” they tout truly relegated just for the polluters and the politicians protecting their dirty businesses?

Arrivederci.

Baggage

By far the most common question I get at public events like a speech, panel, or lecture is, “Delaney, what can I do to help?” The good news is that the answer is rather simple: VOTE. You can quickly and easily register to vote by clicking here.

If you live here in the United States like I do, we have an incredibly important national, state, and local election taking place on November 5th, 2024. And, if you live in Florida like me, early voting begins on October 21st and it’s important to know that in some states early voting has already begun or will start very soon so check with your election’s office for details. And, for gosh sakes, vote.

Nationally, we are about to vote for a new President and, in doing so, select between a well-known former president who, let me politely say, carries a lot of deeply broken baggage with him including being perhaps the most anti-climate candidate in the history of our great country. On the other hand, we have a profound opportunity to make history by electing the first woman, much less multi-racial woman, into America’s highest office by selecting a lifelong public servant who holds the promise of positively focusing on our mutual future rather than its past. A woman, I might add, that I have met and that I have seen within the last year twice visiting South Florida to discuss how important the environment and our climate change crisis is to her.

For me, for many reasons, the choice will be easy, and I literally can’t wait to vote. Here is how the 2024 ballot will look when you vote for President:

As critically important as this year’s Presidential election is, there is SO much more also at stake that requires you to please vote. Federal choices for both the US House and Senate, state House and Senate races that impact your state, and local elections that impact your own community. In just the last seven years that I’ve been able to vote it’s become crystal clear to me that every single one of the decisions that I make on who to support and vote for directly impacts how our country, state, and community is governed in ways that impact all of us.

And in Florida and other states all over America, there are critically important state Constitutional Amendments to vote on this year like Amendment 3 that, if passed, will allow adults over 21 to possess, purchase, and use marijuana recreationally. Here’s what this will look like on your 2024 ballot:

Or, speaking of exercising our rights, Amendment 4 is on the Florida ballot this year and, if passed, it will limit government interference with a woman’s right to decide whether to have an abortion. I don’t know about you, but I am all for limiting government interference on most things and that certainly begins with the decisions I make about my own body. Here’s how Amendment 4 looks on this year’s ballot:

Not YET Registered in Florida? NO Problem!

If you’ve not yet registered you can do so by mailin person at a designated local election office, or (and this is my very favorite) online up until 11:59 PM October 7th. So, the good news is that there’s still time for you to register. The better, best even, news is that you can register online today and that it takes literally about two minutes (or less) on average. If you are not yet registered, would you please, please, please do it right now? Here’s the link: https://registertovoteflorida.gov/home.

Oh, and if you have friends or family members that are not registered, please encourage, and help them register today too. Remember, every single voice and vote counts in our democracy and that’s especially true this year.

When To Vote

In Florida there are three easy ways to cast you ballot:

1. In Person Early Voting: Here in Florida, you can vote in person either early (in Miami, where I live, early voting starts on October 21st and ends at 7:00 PM November 3rd ). Here’s the schedule for Miami-Dade as an example of how plentiful early voting dates, times, and locations are:

2. In Person On Election Day: You can cast your vote in person at your local Polling Place on America’s national General Election Day (November 5th). Here in Miami-Dade county where I live there are 523 Polling Places where folks vote.

Check your Voter’s Registration Card (and bring it and a picture ID to the Polling Place when you vote) for your designated Polling Place (it’ll be conveniently located near where you live) and go there the day of the election. State Divisions of Elections have links to allow you to look up exactly where your Polling Place is located (you can visit Florida’s by clicking here).

3. By Mail: To vote by mail, you must request a ballot by the October 24th deadline and your ballot must be physically received by the Supervisor of Election’s office by 7:00PM on November 5th. You can also request an absentee ballot online to vote by mail here.

Simply stated, as an American little is more important than each of us casting our vote. Please do the democratic thing, the truly patriotic thing, and vote in the upcoming election. Our nation, the environment, and future generations are depending on each of us (on you) to vote and to make the right choices. Like I said, I can’t wait to vote this year and hope that you will join me at the polls by casting your vote too.

Governor DeSantis’ “Great” Plan to Turn Florida Public Park Land Into Pickleball Courts, Golf Courses, 350 Room Resorts & More

On August 19, 2024, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis and Department of Environmental Protection announced the “Great Outdoors Initiative,” which by its name might sound like a positive (or as the title suggests “great”) measure but, as they say, the devil is in the details. The Governor’s “Great” plan seeks to add several different “amenities” such as pickleball courts, disc golf courses, 350 room lodges, and even an entire 18-hole golf course and clubhouse to what are currently beautifully natural State Parks designed to protect Florida’s fragile environments. You can read about the Governor’s “great” plan here.

Needless to say, adding a golf course or pickleball courts to old-growth mangrove forests that protect our shorelines from storm surge and rising seas, as just one example, is not an environmentally sound idea. And while I can’t say I am surprised, what with Florida’s Governor recently signing the “Don’t Say Climate Change” bill that outlaws phrases such as “climate change” and “greenhouse gases” from much of the state’s legislation, amongst other draconian steps, developing Florida’s limited natural public environment into golf courses and pickleball courts sounds like fiction from a Carl Hiaasen novel, but, like much of that author’s incredible work, is rooted in short sighted reality where nature is nearly always paved over for profit.

If you believe that protecting our State Parks and keeping them natural is more important than developing resorts, golf courses, and really much of anything else on them then I hope you will join me and my friends at the University of Miami Environmental Law Society by signing a letter of protest that we will be sending to Governor DeSantis opposing his “Great Outdoors Initiative.” Here’s the text of the letter and you can sign it by clicking here.

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