New paper calls for managed retreat in New Orleans as seas rise

A recent study warns that New Orleans faces severe risks from sea level rise and suggests the city consider relocating inland. The research highlights challenges for Louisiana's seafood industry, which depends on coastal access. Critics argue such proposals overlook local realities and livelihoods.

A paper published in Nature Sustainability this month states that coastal Louisiana has likely crossed a point of no return due to ongoing sea level rise. It projects 3 to 7 meters of additional rise by the end of the century and urges early planning for migration away from the coast. The authors note that New Orleans could resemble Venice, surrounded by water, though still habitable in some form.

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Building on March research revealing sea levels underestimated by nearly a foot in many coastal areas—affecting 80 million people below sea level—a new study maps accelerated land subsidence across 40 major river deltas. Subsidence often exceeds sea level rise tenfold, heightening flood risks for megacities from Shanghai to Jakarta.

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A $101 million project will restore a critical stretch of marshland protecting New Orleans from storm surges. The work is scheduled to begin next summer and finish in mid-2029.

Record flooding last month pushed several northern Michigan dams close to failure, with water nearly spilling over a key barrier in one city. The events have renewed calls to address the nation's aging dams amid intensifying storms driven by climate change.

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Egypt’s Ministry of Water Resources and Irrigation has reviewed progress on coastal protection projects designed to reduce the impact of climate change on the country’s shoreline.

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