Look closely, and you’ll find America’s ‘climate abandonment areas’
by Justine Calma from The Verge - All Posts on (#6H7G1)
A dog passes a pile of destroyed items that were removed from a once flooded home as residents begin the recovery process from Hurricane Harvey August 31, 2017 in Houston, Texas. | Photo credit should read BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty Images
More than 16 million people in the contiguous US - roughly 5 percent of the population - live in a place with heightening flood risk and a shrinking population, according to new research. It makes the case that climate abandonment areas" are becoming a more prevalent phenomenon in the US as people avoid places particularly vulnerable to climate-related disasters.
What's a climate abandonment area? It's a census block where flood risk has grown high enough to start pushing people to leave. Many of these areas lie along the Texas Gulf Coast, coastal Florida, and the mid-Atlantic.
But it's by no means confined to these regions, which can get hit repeatedly by storms during the Atlantic hurricane season. Climate abandonment areas are...