The effects of climate change in Florida are attributable to man-made increases in atmospheric carbon dioxide. Floridians are experiencing increased flooding due to sea level rise, and are concerned about the possibility of more frequent or more intense hurricanes.[1]
The state has been described as America's "ground zero" for climate change, global warming and sea level rise, because "the majority of its population and economy is concentrated along low-elevation oceanfront."[2][3][4][5][6]
Florida residents think climate change is happening at higher rates than the national average. As of March 2023, about two-thirds of the state believes in anthropogenic climate change, up from 55% in April 2020.[7][8] However, the state remains politically divided: while Democrats have reached a general consensus on the issue, only half of Republicans agree and support teaching about climate change in schools.[9] Some communities in Florida have begun implementing climate change mitigation approaches; however, statewide initiatives have been hampered by the politicization of climate change in the United States, focusing on resilience rather than full scale mitigation and adaptation.[10]
Impact of sea level rise
editFlooding during high tides occurs in Miami Beach. The city is spending $500M on elevated roadways, seawalls, and pumping systems, as part of its Sea Level Rise Strategy.[11][12][13][14] GIS mapping of areas subject to flooding during high tides, storm surges, and major storm events is available.[15]
In Key Largo and Big Pine Key, $517,000 is being spent to raise one mile of roads, as a "Sea Level Rise Pilot Project".[16]
A "Sea Level Scenario Sketch Planning Tool is used by the Florida Department of Transportation, MPOs, local governments, and regional planning agencies to assess potential impacts of sea level rise (SLR) on transportation facilities."[17]
Coastal protection, including beach renourishment, has been a focus of state government.[18]
A 2018 Florida International University study says that sea level rise will inundate the mangroves of the Florida Everglades.[19] The stored carbon in the Everglades has been valued at between $2 billion and $3.4 billion.[20][21][22] "As the ocean pushes westward and north into the Everglades and the Biscayne Aquifer," the water supply of Miami will be impacted.[23][24][25] The loss of mangroves and wetlands due to sea level rise will also impact commercial fisheries.[23]
A 2017 study by Cornell University researchers says "nearly two million Floridians will be forced from their homes by 2100 because of climate-induced rising seas."
Impact of climate change on Florida hurricanes
editA change in hurricane frequency or intensity is of concern for Floridians. The Climate Change Center at Florida State University and Climate.gov say the science is inconclusive regarding hurricane frequency or intensity. However, rainfall rates will increase according to most climate models, and the storm surge associated with hurricanes will increase with rising sea levels.[26][27]
After Hurricane Irma in 2017, which occurred just weeks after Hurricane Harvey, Governor Rick Scott did not attribute the possible changes in hurricane patterns to climate change.[28]
There is some evidence that hurricanes may slow down their rate of forward advance, like Hurricane Dorian, which spent a day and a half over Grand Bahama Island on its way to Florida.[29][30][31]
A category 5 hurricane is of most concern in the Tampa Bay area, and climate related sea level rise of as little as six inches would exacerbate its impact.[32]
According to the Fifth National Climate Assessment published in 2023, coastal states including California, Florida, Louisiana, and Texas are experiencing "more significant storms and extreme swings in precipitation".[33]
State climate change policy
editThe Florida Climate Protection Act of 2008 created the Florida Energy and Climate Commission. It also urged the Department of Environmental Protection to develop a greenhouse gas reduction strategy.
Governor Charlie Crist signed several executive orders related to climate change upon taking office. These executive orders included tailpipe emission limits for cars sold in Florida, called for reductions in the state's greenhouse gas emissions, and mandated a minimum of 20 percent renewable energy by 2020 for Florida's electric utilities. The Public Service Commission rejected six new coal-fired power plants under Crist.[34]
Governor Rick Scott "denied the idea of anthropogenic global warming" during his first election in 2010.[28] Use of the term "climate change" was discouraged during his administration. He also eliminated mandates to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and appointed climate skeptics to posts such as the Public Service Commission.[2][35] Scott vetoed $750,000 budgeted for pumping water out of Miami Beach, on the grounds that the money didn't provide "a clear statewide return for the investment,"[35] and did not reply directly when asked if he would support efforts to protect Miami's water supply.[25] Scott was sued by a group of children aged 10–20 for his positions on climate.[36]
Governor Ron DeSantis established an Office of Resiliency and Coastal Protection.[37] DeSantis was noted for actually speaking the word "climate change" in his statement: "This idea of – quote – 'climate change' has become politicized. My environmental policy is just to try to do things that benefit Floridians."[37] However, DeSantis has not make climate mitigation, renewable energy, or greenhouse gas reduction a policy priority.[38][39] In January 2020, DeSantis was given a D grade by the Sierra Club of Florida "for his work on environmental protection and sustainability."[39]
Florida's Republican candidates in local, state, and national office have emphasized risk mitigation and resilience for dealing with climate-related impacts, rather than climate mitigation efforts to prevent climate change.[35][39]
By contrast, South Florida Republicans, such as Miami-Dade County Mayor Carlos Giménez, Representative Carlos Curbelo, and former Representative Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, have said that "man-made climate change is real and needs to be taken seriously."[28]
Florida State Senator José Javier Rodriguez has attempted to draw attention to the problem of sunny day flooding by wearing black rainboots during legislative sessions.[40]
In May 2024, Republican governor Ron DeSantis signed into law, removal of eight of fifteen references to climate change from state laws, removing greenhouse gas emissions reduction as a priority for energy policy, banning construction of offshore wind turbines off Florida's coasts, weakening regulations on natural gas pipelines, and preventing cities from banning appliances like gas stoves.[41]
Public opinion
editThe "Energy Poll", conducted by researchers at the University of Texas at Austin, found that 63% of Floridians in March 2012 believed climate change occurs. The same survey conducted in 2016 saw the number rise to 81%.[35] An October 2020 survey conducted by Florida Atlantic University (FAU) found that over two-thirds of Florida residents expressed concerns about the impact of climate change on the state's future.[42]
In 2023, the FAU's "Florida Climate Resilience Survey" found that 65% of respondents, including 49% of Republicans, believe that climate change is predominantly the result of human activity.[43]
Impact on transportation
editThe Florida Department of Transportation has studied how to use greenhouse gas calculation tools as part of the transportation planning processes, and analyzes transportation infrastructure for impacts of sea level rise.[44][17]
Impact on mangroves
editMangroves are threatened in the Everglades, due to sea level rise.[45] However, the range of mangroves is extending northwards as storms spread the mangrove seed-like propagules. There has been no hard freeze that kills mangroves in Northeast Florida for 30 years.
Mangroves are especially important for carbon sequestration, and have been referred to as "blue carbon." The stored carbon in the mangroves of the Everglades has been estimated to be worth between $2 billion and $3.4 billion.[46]
Mangroves are also useful for flood control and storm protection. At the Tolomato Matanzas Research Reserve, mangroves create a flood barrier during storms, thereby protecting trees. Mangroves also produce soil, which helps maintain the height of the coastline.[47]
Economically destructive red tides are expected to continue as a result of pollution and warming water.[11]
Impact on human health
editFlorida and the U.S. Southeast region face many health-related threats due to tropical storms, sea level rise, extreme heat, and drought.[48]
Flooding and Tropical Cyclones
editFlorida is a low-lying state and is estimated to be the state in the U.S. with the largest population and proportion of population living in the low-elevation coastal zone.[49] Sea level rise threatens to increase flooding. Of an estimated 590,000 people in South Florida vulnerable to sea level rise, it is estimated that 125,000 are socially vulnerable and 55,000 are medically vulnerable.[50]
Tropical cyclones like hurricanes can threaten health in a variety of ways: flooding, strong winds, hazards in the recovery period after a storm, evacuation and displacement, and mental health impacts.
In the United States, drowning is the leading cause of flooding-related death, particularly due to powerful storm surges.[51] Storms can directly threaten lives and also cause power outages due to winds and/or flooding. In Florida, power outages after Hurricane Irma were associated with higher mortality in nursing home residents.[52]
Evacuation and displacement due to a storm can impact health. During the evacuation process, people can lose or forget medication and devices such as hearing aids or dentures and may have difficulty filling prescriptions.[53]
Recovery after a major storm can involve heavy construction and exposure to hazardous materials in floodwaters such as sewage, chemicals, and sharp or broken objects.[54] Dampness after flooding can facilitate mold growth, which is common after flooding in Florida; Florida's hot and humid climate creates favorable conditions for mold growth even in the absence of flooding.[55]
Compared to less developed areas of the world, threats of infectious, respiratory, and diarrheal diseases are low in high income/ developed countries like the U.S. but are more prevalent following flooding events.[51]
Longer-term health impacts include impacts on mental health and pregnancy outcomes. Flooding puts people at higher risk of mental health challenges such as post-traumatic stress disorder, anxiety, and depression.[56] A study of Hurricane Charley in Florida found that exposure to higher wind speeds increased risk of preterm birth.[57]
Extreme Heat
editThe impacts on health of climate change fueled extreme heat are anticipated to be minimal due to Florida's already warm climate that means that much of the population is acclimatized, or adjusted, to heat and most buildings have air conditioning installed.[58] However, extreme heat may still be a threat to older adults, homeless populations, and people who spend time outdoors such as workers in industries such as agriculture and tourism, as well as tourists themselves.[58][59] In summer 2023, Orlando, which contains theme parks such as Disney World, saw its first-ever heat warning from the National Weather Service and saw spikes in heat-related distress calls, more than double than the number five years prior.[60]
Wildfires
editWhile Florida doesn’t make headlines for wildfires as much as other U.S. states like California and Colorado, it too is vulnerable to wildfires, which can have many health impacts, such as on the respiratory and cardiovascular systems.[61] Florida wildfires are most frequent under hot and dry conditions and many fires in the state are prescribed burns or are sparked by military activities.[50] Conditions of future drought and temperature rise may increase wildfire potential in the state.[50]
Mosquito-borne diseases
editSouthern Florida already has a high suitability for mosquito-borne diseases because it is habitable for Aedes aegypti mosquitoes that carry viruses like those that cause Zika, dengue, chikungunya and yellow fever.[50] Future climate change projections predict that much of the Southeastern U.S. will be vulnerable to mosquito-borne diseases, particularly southern Florida which may become suitable to year-round disease transmission.[50]
Population Vulnerability
editA considerable proportion of Florida’s population has characteristics that may make them more vulnerable to health impacts or that may pose barriers to accessing healthcare; approximately 21.6% of Florida's population is over the age of 65, 21.0% are foreign born, 12.7% live below the federal poverty level, and approximately 13.9% of the population does not have health insurance.[62]
Impact of climate change on real estate in coastal areas
editIn 2017, the real estate website Zillow wrote that if climate predictions were correct, by 2100 "One in eight Florida homes would be under water, accounting for nearly half of the lost housing value nationwide." This calculation was based on comparing NOAA maps for a 6-foot sea level rise with the Zillow database of homes.[63]
Real estate website Curbed has presented a table with impacted cities in Florida, homes at risk, and dollar estimates. Curbed has estimated that "Roughly 64,000 homes—including 12,000 in Miami Beach, a nexus of real estate investment—will face chronic flooding," and has described how changes are needed in National Flood Insurance Program.[64] AP cites data from climate risk analytics firm Jupiter Intelligence indicating that "extreme flooding could go from affecting 5% to 86% of Miami-Dade's residential real estate supply by 2030."[65]
A 2018 report by the Union of Concerned Scientists, titled: Underwater: Rising Seas, Chronic Floods, and the Implications for US Coastal Real Estate stated that Florida is the state with the most homes at risk from climate change: "about 1 million homes (more than 10% of the state's current residential properties)."[66]
Officials in the Florida Keys found that it would take 75 million dollars to save three miles of road serving about two dozen homes. A December 2019 New York Times article describing the decisions facing Monroe County was titled, "Florida Keys Deliver a Hard Message: As Seas Rise, Some Places Can't Be Saved."[67] Some small islands in the Keys may disappear altogether.[68]
Climate gentrification is increasing real estate values in parts of Miami that are at higher elevation, and decreasing values in lower-elevation areas.[69] By 2017, two poor black neighborhoods of Miami which are located on higher ground, Little Haiti and Liberty City, started becoming more attractive to investors.[70][69][71] Home prices appreciated more slowly in 2018 in Miami Beach and lower-lying areas of Miami-Dade County.[72]
One flood assessment company describes the South Florida housing market as being kept afloat by "systemic fraudulent nondisclosure" of flood risks to property.[73][74] A bill passed by the US House of Representatives to require real estate agents to disclose flood risks had not made it through the Senate as of February 2019.[73]
Climate change education
editFlorida's climate change education standard states: "Identify, analyze, and relate the internal (earth system) and external (astronomical) conditions that contribute to global climate change." The standard falls short of the Next Generation Science Standards, which have been adopted by 20 states and the District of Columbia. The human-caused elements of climate change and role of human activity are treated "as an aside," according to a leader with the Alliance for Climate Education.[75]
Local climate mitigation efforts
editMiami-Dade County has built seawalls,[76] implemented an Urban CO2 Reduction Plan,[77] and participates in the South Florida Regional Climate Compact.[78] Miami Mayor Francis Suarez has pledged to make the city carbon neutral by 2050.[42]
Pensacola has formed a Climate Mitigation and Adaptation Task Force which meets monthly.[79][80][81]
Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer was "one of the nation's first mayors to sign onto the Climate Mayors' Pledge." Orlando plans to convert its city vehicle fleet to alternative fuels by 2030.[82]
Sarasota's Climate Adaption and Mitigation Center has been funded to work on "a curated database of peer-reviewed science to inform decision-making in academia, government and the private sector."[83]
In North Central Florida, where climate change denial is stronger, climate change efforts were starting to be visible in 2020 in Gainesville, Alachua County, St. Augustine and Jacksonville.[84]
In Broward County's Oakland Park, drainage installed with a FEMA Hazard Mitigation Grant prevented damage to 400 homes during Hurricane Irma.[85]
Coral Gables Mayor Jim Cason has said, "We're working hard to create solutions until we inevitably must retreat."[86]
South Florida climate adaptation strategies
editClimate journalism
editThe South Florida Sun Sentinel, Miami Herald and Palm Beach Post, along with WLRN Public Media, have formed a collaboration to cover climate change issues. The collaboration provides news and feature coverage, and a website created by its editorial boards titled: The Invading Sea, Florida and the Climate Crisis.[87][88]
Southeast Florida Regional Climate Compact
editThe Southeast Florida Regional Climate Compact is a partnership between Broward, Miami-Dade, Monroe, and Palm Beach Counties. Its goal is "to work collaboratively to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, implement adaptation strategies, and build climate resilience."[78]
Integrative Collaborative on Climate and Energy (ICCE)
editThe Florida Center for Environmental Studies at Florida Atlantic University has formed an Integrative Collaborative on Climate and Energy (ICCE) focused on issues of climate adaptation in Florida's urban and natural systems. Partners include the Florida Climate Initiative, the University of South Florida, and various government agencies.[89]
Miami-Dade County Climate Programs
editMiami has been described as "ground zero" for climate change and sea level rise."[90] The Miami-Dade County Office of Resilience has implemented climate programs and a Climate Action Plan,[91][92] and there is a Sea Level Rise Committee.[93] Protecting the water supply and the Biscayne Aquifer is a priority.[23][24][25]
See also
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- ^ Miami-Dade County - Environment (2020). "Urban CO2 Reduction Plan". www.miamidade.gov. Retrieved 2020-02-16.
- ^ a b "Southeast Florida Regional Climate Compact". Southeast Florida Regional Climate Compact. Retrieved 2020-02-16.
- ^ "Climate Mitigation and Adaptation Task Force". City of Pensacola, Florida Official Website. Retrieved 2020-02-16.
- ^ Robinson, Kevin (January 17, 2017). "City task force tackling climate change". Pensacola News Journal. Retrieved 2020-02-16.
- ^ Baucum, Joseph (June 1, 2017). "Pensacola climate change task force meets to curb local global warming impact". Pensacola News Journal. Retrieved 2020-02-16.
- ^ Peters, Xander. "Florida will bear the brunt of climate change. Why do we keep voting for lawmakers without a plan?". Orlando Weekly. Retrieved 2020-02-16.
- ^ "Climate Adaption and Mitigation Center Receives Tax-Exempt Status". Sarasota Magazine. Retrieved 2020-02-16.
- ^ Bird, Chris (January 17, 2020). "Chris Bird: Living with climate change in North Central Florida". Gainesville Sun. Retrieved 2020-02-16.
- ^ "Florida Mitigation Projects Prove Successful". FEMA.gov. March 14, 2018. Retrieved 2020-02-16.
- ^ Castillo, Jessica M (2020). "The City Beautiful Confronts Climate Change | Climate Change - a special report from the University of Miami". University of Miami. Retrieved 2020-02-26.
- ^ "About Us". The Invading Sea. 2019. Retrieved 2020-02-16.
- ^ ""It's just become daily news": Six Florida newsrooms are teaming up to cover climate change". Nieman Lab. Retrieved 2020-02-16.
- ^ "CES - Climate Change in South Florida". www.ces.fau.edu. Retrieved 2020-02-16.
- ^ "Climate Change - a special report from the University of Miami". Retrieved 2020-02-16.
- ^ "Miami-Dade County Climate Programs". www8.miamidade.gov. Retrieved 2020-02-16.
- ^ "Climate Action Plan" (PDF). Miami Dade County.
- ^ Ariza, Mario Alejandro (2020). Disposable city : Miami's future on the shores of climate catastrophe (First ed.). New York, NY: Bold Type Books. pp. 255–260. ISBN 978-1-5417-8846-6. OCLC 1123233347.
Further reading
edit- Carter, L.; A. Terando; K. Dow; K. Hiers; K.E. Kunkel; A. Lascurain; D. Marcy; M. Osland; P. Schramm (2018). "Southeast". In Reidmiller, D.R.; C.W. Avery; D.R. Easterling; K.E. Kunkel; K.L.M. Lewis; T.K. Maycock; B.C. Stewart (eds.). Impacts, Risks, and Adaptation in the United States: Fourth National Climate Assessment, Volume II (Report). Washington, DC, USA: U.S. Global Change Research Program. pp. 872–940. doi:10.7930/NCA4.2018.CH19.—this chapter of the National Climate Assessment covers Southeast states (Virginia, West Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Tennessee, Arkansas, Louisiana).
- Ariza, Mario Alejandro (2020). Disposable city : Miami's future on the shores of climate catastrophe (First ed.). New York, NY: Bold Type Books. ISBN 978-1-5417-8846-6. OCLC 1123233347.
External links
edit- Florida Climate Institute
- The Invading Sea, Florida and the Climate Crisis
- "Climate Change and Florida" (PDF). United States Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Policy, Planning and Evaluation. September 1997. Retrieved 2020-02-17.
- "Climate Change and the Everglades - Case Study" (PDF). United States Environmental Protection Agency / National Park Service / US Fish and Wildlife Service.
- Miami-Dade County Flood Zones GIS Tool