Florida Keys Could be Lost to Rising Seas

Posted: July 13, 2009

CAMMY CLARK,
The Miami Herald

KEY WEST, Fla.—Treasure salvors searching for an 18th-century wreck in the Florida Straits a few years ago made a fascinating but little noticed discovery. Not buried treasure. Buried land.

Some 35 miles west of Key West, in 45 feet of water under a five-foot layer of dense mud lay an 8,500-year-old shoreline not unlike today's coast of the Florida Keys. There were well-preserved mangroves, pine cones and pine tree pieces, some amazingly still fragrant when brought to the surface.

"Looking at it, I was thinking: 'Wow, this could be the shoreline of Big Pine Key,'" said Corey Malcom, director of archaeology for the Mel Fisher Maritime Heritage Society.

The prehistoric past paints a sobering picture of what many experts see as an all-too-near future for the string of low-lying islands that make up the Florida Keys.

"South Florida is on the front line against sea-level rise in the United States, and the Florida Keys are ground zero," said Evan Flugman, who co-authored a Florida International University report on the importance of Monroe County tackling the issue now.

By 2100, under the best-case predictions of a seven-inch sea-level rise by an international climate panel, the Keys would lose about 59,000 acres of real estate worth $11 billion, according to the nonprofit Nature Conservancy.

Under the panel's worst-case projection of ocean waters rising 23.2 inches, about 75 percent of the Keys 154,000 acres and nearly 50 percent of its $43 billion property value could become submerged. Consequences also include the loss of habitat for many endangered plants and species, including Key deer.

And the panel's predictions are conservative in comparison to some scientists' calculations.

The eye-opening projections were presented at a June meeting in Marathon to urge Monroe County Mayor George Neugent, other Keys leaders and residents to develop long-term plans to deal with climate change. Unlike Miami-Dade and Broward counties, the Keys do not have a climate change task force.

The charts displayed at the meeting, which depicted disappearing land, weren't intended as scare tactics. As Chris Bergh, the Nature Conservancy's director of coastal and marine resilience for Florida, said: "Nobody is going to drown from sea-level rise."

In the last century, waters in the Keys gradually rose nine inches, an amount that caught the attention of scientists but few others. But if a growing consensus of climate predictions for this century prove true, rising waters will become impossible to ignore.

"This presentation is not to make anybody panic and run out and sell their property; I live on Big Pine and am trying to add onto my home," Bergh said. "It's designed to make people think and get better information."

During the presentation, Patrick Gleason, a geologist and member of the Broward County Climate Change Committee, noted that South Florida is among the world's more vulnerable areas, due to low elevation and a porous limestone base.

A Nature Conservancy study mapped out the potential ecological and economic consequences of rising seas for the Keys, particularly Big Pine Key. Yet the FIU study concluded that little has been done to plan for climate change in the Keys.

"If we are the canary in the coal mine, let's start tweeting," said the Nature Conservancy's Florida Keys conservation manager Alison Higgins, who also serves as president of the Keys' nonprofit Green Living Energy Education.

James Murley, appointed by Gov. Charlie Crist as chairman of the Florida Energy & Climate Commission, said Monroe County should take advantage of its state designation as an area of critical concern. He said the county should seek help from the state and nearby climate change task forces.

Murley, who lives part time in Key West, acknowledged that "there are still a lot of science questions out there. But go with what you know and start makings plans, which you can adjust."

Experts at the Keys meeting said any plan to address rising seas should include mitigation to help reduce greenhouse gases that are accelerating sea-level rise and adaptation to cope with the consequences.

Gary Plyler of WA,

I cannot improve on your explanation of the scientific method. Nice Work! These journalists and politicians will allow themselves to believe whatever they want to believe, and then report it as fact. So we have to continue to call them out and confront them with the truth. If they won’t admit the truth, then we must shame them and humiliate them until they begin to understand that we now have the power to hold them accountable:

http://www.usnews.com/articles/opinion/2009/07/14/americas-first-global-warming-cap-and-trade-program-is-working-and-heres-why/comments/

I would also like to add that there isn’t any evidence from the real world showing any rise in sea level:

"The reason why Dr Mörner, formerly a Stockholm professor, is so certain that these claims about sea level rise are 100 per cent wrong is that they are all based on computer model predictions, whereas his findings are based on "going into the field to observe what is actually happening in the real world".

When running the International Commission on Sea Level Change, he launched a special project on the Maldives, whose leaders have for 20 years been calling for vast sums of international aid to stave off disaster. Six times he and his expert team visited the islands, to confirm that the sea has not risen for half a century. Before announcing his findings, he offered to show the inhabitants a film explaining why they had nothing to worry about. The government refused to let it be shown.

Similarly in Tuvalu, where local leaders have been calling for the inhabitants to be evacuated for 20 years, the sea has if anything dropped in recent decades. The only evidence the scaremongers can cite is based on the fact that extracting groundwater for pineapple growing has allowed seawater to seep in to replace it. Meanwhile, Venice has been sinking rather than the Adriatic rising, says Dr Mörner."

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/columnists/christopherbooker/5067351/Rise-of-sea-levels-is-the-greatest-lie-ever-told.html

Barry of CA @ Jul 24, 2009 17:32:17 PM

Climate Change = Socialist Takeover of Economy

Dont believe the hype. The GREEN crowd is all about control. They can only use FEAR to scare you. The writer of this article should be SUED by the property owners of the KEYS for propaganda. This is PURE propaganda nothing more. WAKE UP AMERICA!! Cap and Tax is going to KILL THE USA. Socialized Medicine is going to KILL THE USA. We cannot spend our way to health, wealth and prosperity.

Buck Farack of FL @ Jul 13, 2009 10:54:10 AM

Investing in the Keys

The folks who don't accept the evidence for and consequences of, global warming might want to put their money where their mouth is; sizable investments in Florida Keys' beach front real estate.

Blake Ives of TX @ Jul 13, 2009 03:34:27 AM

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