A new climate doomsday report warns that New Orleans and Miami could cease to exist by 2050 due to rising sea levels caused by global warming.
Apocalyptic Report An article by Lakeisha Ethans from The Travel magazine outlines “seven places in the US that may disappear in the near future” if climate change continues on its current path.
For example, Ethans warns that the disappearance of “Glacier National Park's majestic glaciers” is an “imminent threat due to the relentless progression of climate change.”
In a calm, sobering tone, the article claims that rising seas are “engulfing coastal cities,” extreme weather events are “wreaking havoc,” and once-abundant wildlife is “on the brink of extinction.”
New Orleans, Louisiana, is “on the front line of climate change,” Ethans writes, with the city threatened by “inexorable sea-level rise and land subsidence.”
Because of this, the city of New Orleans “could be partially submerged by 2050 due to the growing threat of sea level rise,” she added.
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If this article is to be believed, the situation will get even worse in Miami, Florida, which will be on the short list of “major US cities likely to be submerged within 50 years.”
Meanwhile, in Alaska, the tiny Inupiat village of Shishmaref, on an island in the Chukchi Sea, is facing existential threats from coastal erosion and melting permafrost.
“Due to rising sea levels, Shishmaref is expected to disappear within 20 to 25 years, creating mass climate refugees,” Ethans argues, picturing desperate natives in birch-bark canoes fleeing the sinking island.
Shishmaref has a total population of 563.
Meanwhile, recent studies have shown that despite slight sea-level rise, many islands are not shrinking (as alarmists had predicted) but are instead stabilizing or even growing.
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At the beginning of this summer, The New York Times He acknowledged that, despite what alarmists predict, island nations are not actually in danger of being submerged by climate change.
In the June 26th article “Disappeared Islands that Didn't Disappear,” The New York Times Climate reporter Raymond Chong Recorded The startling discovery that atoll nations such as the Maldives, the Marshall Islands and Tuvalu, which were thought to be gone, have somehow not disappeared.
Zhong wrote:
But recently, scientists have begun to tell a surprising new story about these islands. By comparing aerial photographs from the mid-20th century with more recent satellite imagery, scientists were able to see how the islands have changed over time. What they discovered was surprising: despite rising sea levels, many of the islands have not shrunk. In fact, most islands have remained stable, and some have even expanded.





