White House: Climate change may
flood airports
WASHINGTON - Twelve of the country's 47 largest
airports are vulnerable to storm surges that are expected to increase from
climate change, according to a White House report released earlier this
week.
The U.S. National Climate Assessment released Tuesday warned that
coastal airports with at least one runway 12 feet or less above sea level could
suffer flooding during moderate to high storm surges.
The report noted
that metro New York's big three airports - John F. Kennedy, LaGuardia and Newark
- already flooded in October 2012 during the 14-foot tidal surge from Hurricane
Sandy. LaGuardia closed for three days.
LaGuardia already maintains a
dike and pumps for floodwaters, according to a 2002 Transportation Department
report cited in the White House report.
"Many coastal airports are
vulnerable to flooding," the 2002 report noted from a California assessment
about airports built on swamps in San Francisco and Oakland. "Extreme high
tides, coupled with flood conditions, can reach close to the existing
levels."
Sea levels are projected to rise 1 to 4 feet this century, and
more frequent storms from climate change could either flood runways or force
construction of expensive barriers, the report said.
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