As sea level rises, coastal communities brace for more frequent, destructive tidal flooding

The mid-Atlantic coast is expected to see some of the greatest increases in flood frequency. Places such as Annapolis, Maryland and Washington, D.C. can expect more than 150 tidal floods a year, and several locations in New Jersey could see eighty tidal floods or more.

As sea level rises, many tidal flooding events will shift from being minor to more extensive, with accompanying increases in disruptions and damage.

Tidal flooding in 2045: From chronic to incessant
By 2045, many coastal communities are expected to see roughly one foot of sea level rise. The resulting increases in tidal flooding will be substantial and nearly universal in the fifty-two communities analyzed.

One-third of the fifty-two locations would face tidal flooding more than 180 times per year. Nine locations, including Atlantic City and Cape May, New Jersey could see tidal flooding 240 times or more per year.

A growing proportion of these floods would be extensive, and as floods reach farther into communities, they would also last longer. Flood-prone areas in five of the mid-Atlantic communities studied could be inundated more than 10 percent of the time.

As the reach of the tides expands, communities now largely unfamiliar with tidal flood conditions will be forced to grapple with chronic flooding — a new normal. Many of the studied locations that today see fewer than five tidal floods per year could see a 10-fold increase in the number of floods annually by 2045.

What we can do: Sensible steps and forward-looking policies
Increased tidal flooding is essentially guaranteed. Changes already set in motion by our past and present heat-trapping emissions will largely drive the pace of sea level rise and flooding over the next several decades.

Coastal communities must act with urgency to prepare for this rising threat — and the report notes that there are many things we can do to help ensure enduring coastal communities.

Municipalities, with state and federal help, should prioritize and incentivize flood-proofing of homes, neighborhoods, and key infrastructure; curtail development in areas subject to tidal flooding; consider the risks and benefits of adaptation measures such as sea walls and natural buffers; and develop long-term plans based on the best available science.

The costs and challenges, however, are too great for municipalities to shoulder alone. A coordinated, well-funded federal response is also needed and should include both substantial investments in coastal resilience building, as well as action to deeply and swiftly reduce global warming pollution. This latter action may ultimately be the only reliable way to protect coastal communities over the long term — by slowing the pace of future sea level rise.

There is a hard truth about adaptation, however. It has fundamental limits — whether physical, economic, or social — and it can only fend off the impacts of sea level rise to a point.

As sea level rises higher, even our best protection efforts will not suffice in some areas in the face of rising tides, waves, and storm surges.

If it reaches limits of coastal adaptation, a community will face the prospect of shifting back from heavily impacted areas. These limits will arrive sooner in those areas exposed to greater risks, those with more fragile ecosystems and limited natural buffers, and those that are less well-off economically.

The report concludes that leaders at all levels of government need to take seriously the risks facing people living along our coasts and the urgent need for action. “We must prepare our communities for encroaching tides and other impacts of sea level rise even as we make a concerted effort to reduce the heat-trapping emissions that will determine the rate at which the ocean rises over the long term,” the report says.

— Read more in Erika Spanger-Siegfried, Melanie Fitzpatrick, and Kristina Dahl, Encroaching Tides: How Sea Level Rise and Tidal Flooding Threaten U.S. East and Gulf Coast Communities over the Next 30 Years (Union of Concerned Scientists, October 2014)