While serving as a top Interior Department policy advisor for seven years as a member of the Senior Executive Service (SES), Clement had frequently visited Alaska Native villages in an effort to help them better plan and prepare for a set of devastating climate change impacts, such as melting tundra and
severe coastal erosion.
Severe coastal erosion at Ocean Beach, San Francisco, as a result of storm damage during the 2009/10 El Niño.
Once a main attraction, Cua Dai Beach now suffers from
severe coastal erosion.
Not exact matches
Sustaining fresh water and energy resources; mitigating the effects of natural hazards such as earthquakes, volcanic eruptions,
severe weather, landslides,
coastal erosion, and solar flares; and dealing with the consequences of global warming and sea - level rise are issues that affect all populations, regardless of gender, ethnicity, or cultural traditions.
But as temperatures rise and global warming continues to manifest itself in rising seas,
coastal erosion, and more
severe droughts, floods, and storms, climate change is becoming increasingly intertwined in the reasoning behind why people pick up and leave.
Coastal locations where
erosion is particularly
severe and / or where
coastal development is in imminent danger include North Topsail Beach and Nags Head in North Carolina; the west end of Dauphin Island in Alabama; Galveston, Texas; and Miami Beach, Florida [1].
At the coasts, strong winds, up to nearly hurricane force, will batter beaches with 20 - foot waves for three high tide cycles, prompting concern for
severe beach
erosion and major
coastal flooding from Maryland to Massachusetts.
By the end of this century, increased rates of sea - level rise (SLR) could cause pcmanent inundation of portions of low - lying
coastal cities, repeated flooding episodes, and more
severe beach
erosion.
With such a rise, flooding and
coastal erosion would be especially
severe in heavily populated
coastal areas of the tropics and warm temperate regions.
If you don't know what's happening to small islands... communities like the Carteret Islands are on the front lines of climate change, because of rising seas and
severe weather — they are experiencing more
severe storm surges,
coastal erosion.