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A leafy capital known for scorching summers faces 'mass abandonment' over new deadly flooding threat

A leafy capital known for scorching summers faces 'mass abandonment' over new deadly flooding threat

Daily Mail​8 hours ago

Sacramento could lose more than a quarter of its population by 2055 , according to a dire new report.
Rising flood risk, soaring insurance costs, and worsening air quality will make the city increasingly unlivable.
The California capital — home to roughly 2.4 million people in the broader metro area — is uniquely vulnerable, sitting at the confluence of the Sacramento and American Rivers.
Researchers from First Street Foundation say rising temperatures are melting mountain snow faster, swelling river flows and fueling more frequent heavy rain events.
The group's new National Risk Assessment predicts that 28 percent of Sacramento County residents will leave by 2055, a threshold it categorizes as 'mass abandonment.'
In addition to the growing flood threat, the report cites skyrocketing home insurance premiums, poor air quality from wildfire smoke, and demographic shifts as key drivers of the exodus.
And Sacramento isn't alone. First Street also predicts Fresno could lose half its population by mid-century — the sharpest projected decline of any major U.S. city.
As California faces more intense storms and higher river flows, experts say once-livable communities may become untenable for everyday homeowners.
The Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta lowlands will become less and less able to absorb such deluges and dangerous flooding will become more likely, researchers predict.
In December a report from the US Chamber of Commerce named Sacramento as at highly exception flood risk in need of mitigation.
'The Army Corps of Engineers and the [Sacramento River] levees have historically done quite a good job of providing protection,' UCLA climate scientist Daniel Swain told the San Francisco Chronicle.
'That's probably thanks to good luck and probably thanks to good engineering, but that good luck probably won't hold forever.'
Swain warned that mass development of low-lying areas around the city have spread the risk of flooding further.
Developing the area has made California's Central Valley, but Sacramento in particular, one of the largest populations in the US highly vulnerable to flood risk.
First Street found that risk of flooding was the biggest driver of migration in the US compared to other perils such as poor air quality, wildfires and hurricanes.
One of the biggest economic risks of living in an area prone to flooding is that most home insurance providers will not cover flooding.
Many insurance providers will not cover flooding in their policies
Instead the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) provides a flood insurance program.
First Street analysis found that it will cost 137 percent more to insure homes in Sacramento by 2055.
Such costs will drive businesses and residents away to more climate-resilient areas.
'Some people will no doubt be displaced by climate events,' Jesse Keenan, director of the Center on Climate Change and Urbanism at Tulane University, told the Chronicle.
'But many more will be displaced, or at least steered by, the hand of the market,' he explained.
Other areas of California are also facing an insurance crisis, with major providers such as State Farm hiking prices after threatening to pull out of the state entirely.

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Severe weather hits the US hard as key forecast offices reel from Trump cuts
Severe weather hits the US hard as key forecast offices reel from Trump cuts

The Guardian

timean hour ago

  • The Guardian

Severe weather hits the US hard as key forecast offices reel from Trump cuts

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Rare roll clouds roll over Portugal during record heatwave
Rare roll clouds roll over Portugal during record heatwave

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Rare roll clouds roll over Portugal during record heatwave

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At the chokepoint of Kaub, cargo vessels could only sail about 50% full, at Duisburg and Cologne between 40-50% full. Greece To the east, Greece and Turkey have also been hit hard by wildfires, causing chaos for tourists as hundreds of passengers were left stranded. Greece has issued a 'very high' fire alert for six major regions amid the extreme heatwave. On the island of Karpathos, with a heat weather warning in place, a search operation was launched after a British holidaymaker did not return to his rented accommodation. The man was last seen by the owner of the accommodation on Friday, June 27, a police source said. The owner told police that they understood the 60-year-old was going to leave her place on Saturday. She became worried by the lack of contact and went to check on the tourist, whose possessions and car were found still at the property, according to local media. Inside the car was said to be a mobile phone on charge, with personal belongings. It is understood the tourist had two phones with them. The Foreign Office said it was supporting the family of a man missing in Greece, and in contact with the local authorities. Switzerland Not even Switzerland was immune from the heat, with the Alps reporting record-breaking temperatures. It was the first time that the entire Alpine range had seen temperatures above 0C in June. Snow loss continues to threaten glaciers, the communities underneath them and ski resorts across Europe.

France shuts schools as heatwave grips Europe, sea off Spain at record high temperatures
France shuts schools as heatwave grips Europe, sea off Spain at record high temperatures

Reuters

timean hour ago

  • Reuters

France shuts schools as heatwave grips Europe, sea off Spain at record high temperatures

PARIS/MADRID, July 1 (Reuters) - More than a thousand schools were closed in France on Tuesday and the top floor of the Eiffel Tower was shut to tourists as a severe heatwave continued to grip Europe, triggering health alerts across the region. The Mediterranean Sea was up to 6 degrees Celsius warmer than usual for the time of year, hitting a record of as much as 30 C (86 F) in Spain's Balearic Sea as a heat dome trapped hot air above Europe, the country's Aemet weather forecaster said. Europe is the world's fastest-warming continent, heating up at twice the global average, according to the EU's Copernicus Climate Change Service, making extreme heatwaves occur earlier in the year, and persist into later months. In France, the heat was set to peak on Tuesday, reaching 40-41 C in some areas and 36-39 C in most others, weather forecaster Meteo France said. Sixteen departments will be on the highest level of alert from noon, with 68 on the second highest. Some 1,350 schools will be fully or partially closed due to the heat, up significantly from around 200 on Monday, the Education Ministry said. The top floor of the Eiffel Tower will be closed on Tuesday and Wednesday, with visitors advised to drink plenty of water. The extreme heat also raised the risk of field fires as farmers in France, the European Union's biggest grain producer, start harvesting this year's crop. Some farmers were working through the night to avoid harvesting during peak temperatures in the afternoon. In the Indre region of central France, which has seen a spate of field fires since late June, authorities banned field work between 2 p.m. and 6 p.m. The intense heat could harm biodiversity, some experts said. "In the past we have seen impacts like mass mortalities of invertebrate species, die-offs of seagrass beds and disease outbreaks in mussel farms. It's likely that we'll see similar impacts from this event," said scientist Kathryn Smith of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom. Health alerts have been issued across Europe, with residents and tourists alike seeking ways to keep cool. Extreme heat kills up to 480,000 people annually around the world, according to Swiss Re, which notes this exceeds the combined toll from floods, earthquakes and hurricanes. In a retirement home in Grimbergen, Belgium, residents passed a ball to each other in a paddling pool. "To me it's a great activity," said Marie-Jeanne Olbrechts, one of the residents. The DGG association for geriatric care in Germany said most regions of the country were not adequately prepared for a heatwave. "If they were, they could prevent tens of thousands of deaths in the future," said Clemens Becker, author of a study conducted on behalf of the DGG. Scientists say greenhouse gas emissions from burning fossil fuels are a key cause of climate change, with deforestation and industrial practices being other contributing factors. Last year was the planet's hottest on record.

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