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hatrack

(60,934 posts)
Sat Jan 13, 2024, 09:24 AM Jan 2024

PNAS Study: Migration Away From Rising Seas Will Leave Older, Sicker Coastal Populations Behind

As sea levels rise by multiple feet in the coming decades, communities along the coastal United States will face increasingly frequent flooding from high tides and tropical storms. Thousands of homes will become uninhabitable or disappear underwater altogether. For many in these communities, these risks are poised to drive migration away from places like New Orleans, Louisiana, and Miami, Florida — and toward inland areas that face less danger from flooding.

This migration won’t happen in a uniform manner, because migration never does. In large part this is because young adults move around much more than elderly people, since the former have better job prospects. It’s likely that this time-tested trend will hold true as Americans migrate away from climate disasters: The phenomenon has already been observed in places like New Orleans, where elderly residents were less likely to evacuate during Hurricane Katrina in 2005, and in Puerto Rico, where the median age has jumped since 2017’s Hurricane Maria, as young people leave the U.S. territory for the mainland states.

A new paper published in the prestigious Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences offers a glimpse at the shape and scale of this demographic shift as climate change accelerates. Using sea-level rise models and migration data gleaned from the latest U.S. Census, the paper projects that outmigration from coastal areas could increase the median age in those places by as much as 10 years over the course of this century. That’s almost as much as the difference between the median age in the United States and the median age in Japan, which is among the world’s most elderly countries.

Climate-driven migration promises a generational realignment of U.S. states, as coastal parts of Florida and Georgia grow older and receiving states such as Texas and Tennessee see an influx of young people. It could also create a vicious cycle of decline in coastal communities, as investors and laborers relocate from vulnerable coasts to inland areas — and in doing so incentivize more and more working-age adults to follow in their footsteps. “When we’re thinking about the effect of climate migration on population change, we have to think beyond just the migrants themselves and start thinking about the second order effects,” said Mathew Hauer, a professor of geography at Florida State University and the lead author of the paper.

EDIT

https://grist.org/migration/climate-migration-sea-level-rise-elderly-aging-florida/

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PNAS Study: Migration Away From Rising Seas Will Leave Older, Sicker Coastal Populations Behind (Original Post) hatrack Jan 2024 OP
been saying for a while now- if we build it, they will come. build green cities on higher ground. mopinko Jan 2024 #1
There's plenty of room for displaced people in existing cities if we turn them into places... hunter Jan 2024 #3
yeah, capitalism wont get it done. mopinko Jan 2024 #4
The problem is that this is a slow motion catastrophe Old Crank Jan 2024 #2
States like Florida have been attracting older populations for years NickB79 Jan 2024 #5

mopinko

(71,813 posts)
1. been saying for a while now- if we build it, they will come. build green cities on higher ground.
Sat Jan 13, 2024, 10:12 AM
Jan 2024

energy independence makes housing much more affordable. tiny homes, prefab homes, walkable urban centers.
add green jobs, sustainable ag, a solid safety net, ppl will come.

toss in reclaiming brownfields to do it, it’s win-win-win-win-win.

hunter

(38,933 posts)
3. There's plenty of room for displaced people in existing cities if we turn them into places...
Sat Jan 13, 2024, 12:40 PM
Jan 2024

... where car ownership is unnecessary.

Pulling up parking lots and highways to build pleasant, affordable, walkable communities doesn't require any sort of magic, it's the politics that get ugly.

Our city has a an empty Sears department store with acres of empty parking lots surrounding it.

It seems like it would be a great place to put affordable housing, with plenty of shops, restaurants, and a supermarket nearby. Easy, right?

Alas, it seems there are too many people who imagine themselves as Park Place and Boardwalk developers even as the world burns around them.

mopinko

(71,813 posts)
4. yeah, capitalism wont get it done.
Sat Jan 13, 2024, 01:09 PM
Jan 2024

have to go full bore socialism for it to work well.
but i dont think any of the folks we’re talkin about want to live in big cities. i’m hoping to live to see all the malls that r emptying out turned into housing. but some folks like small towns and it’s hard to blame them.

Old Crank

(4,651 posts)
2. The problem is that this is a slow motion catastrophe
Sat Jan 13, 2024, 11:47 AM
Jan 2024

There will be a trickle away from these places. Then a large event. That will bankrupt cities and towns which cannot cover loses. People moving in even now expect to be backstopped by government for their poor decisions.

It will be a real mess. These GOP states will be ill prepared.

NickB79

(19,625 posts)
5. States like Florida have been attracting older populations for years
Sat Jan 13, 2024, 03:09 PM
Jan 2024

It will be a double whammy for them.

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