Latin American investors have been active here, but historically they focused on residential properties in
major coastal cities like Miami.
Not exact matches
Place this legacy within Israel's geographic location at the nexus of ancient European, Arabian, Middle Eastern, and north African civilizations, then add a
coastal climate more temperate than inland Jerusalem, and you get a
city that — much
like Beirut, barely 100 miles to the north — quickly developed into a
major hub of contemporary art.
As we have seen in Flint, it seems
like many people will start having to be seriously harmed by sea levels rising in
coastal cities (e.g.
major power plants in California being submerged) in order for change to be implemented.
Because much of humanity, including many residents of the world's
major cities like Kolkata (Calcutta), London, Shanghai, and Washington, DC, are located in vulnerable
coastal areas, hundreds of millions of people are directly at risk.