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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
13.05.2008
The Next New Orleans?

      

The Los Angeles Times reported this past weekend that the California Department of Water Resources is sounding the alarm about the possibility of a catastrophic flood in the Sacramento area:

A recent state report predicts that the right combination of unlucky weather conditions could put some parts of the city under more than 20 feet of water, causing a $25-billion disaster that would cripple state government and ripple through the California economy. ...

Worst-case scenarios project 500 dead, 102 square miles flooded, 300,000 people uprooted, an international airport and state agencies under water, and years of recovery.

This worst-case scenario isn't very likely, but it's well within the realm of possibility. Until the Bureau of Reclamation and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers got involved about a century ago, the Central Valley ended up being a shallow inland sea for much of the year, and many of the newer suburban developments along the Sacramento River are exceptionally poorly situated.

What's more, as Glen Martin wrote last year in a rather disturbing hypothetical account of a disastrous northern California flood, global warming threatens to make things worse, since in a wet winter rain (as opposed to snow, which would be stored naturally in the Sierras and gradually released) could inundate the Sacramento and American Rivers and overwhelm the dams and levees. In 2006 voters approved a bond measure to substantially upgrade the state's flood control system, but it's still a work in progress.

--Josh Patashnik 

Posted: Tuesday, May 13, 2008 4:33 PM with 3 comment(s)

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liberal reformer said:

No, such an apocalyptic scenario is not likely. But with the ratcheting up of the effects of global warming, it would be statistically more probable than before. It only takes one hundred - year event to kill scores of people and cause untold damage.

Josh: While I have your attention, may I suggest a topic for you or perhaps another TNR staffer? The Energy Department has just released a report which resulted from a collaboration between  industry and research laboratories suggesting that in two decades we could derive 20% of our power from wind. This would require a huge expansion in the infrastructure to transmit power from the windiest areas to the rest of the country. Could someone at TNR game the feasability of all this?

May 13, 2008 12:35 PM

singlespeed said:

liberal...

There is a slowly growing push for coastal wind development in Michigan and in Iowa, a Scottish renewable energy company makes wind turbine components. Of course if you made that lovely drive from southern LA to Palm Springs you can get a sense of the beauty that an engineered element like the wind turbine can have in the landscape. The problem some people have with wind turbines aside from the cyclical nature of wind or aesthetics, is the impact on migratory bird flight paths. But the new single and twin blade turbines spin at speeds less detrimental to birds and produce more power with higher efficiencies than the smaller faster turbines. The caveat is that they need steady wind..i.e. coast areas of Michigan with the chinooks of Canada coming down. The plains of N & S Dakota, Kansas and Oklahoma provide prime real estate for wind farming opportunities. It's more a political will to help along the development. Perhaps what we need is a more comprehensive analysis of regional energy production where certain renewable technologies can be most beneficial instead of our one size fits all approach to everything in America. The move towards smart grids will help this too.

May 13, 2008 2:22 PM

cspencef said:

The catastrophic Sacramento flood scenario isn't that new; heck, the Weather Channel already jumped all over that bandwagon on one of their hypercaffeinated "It Could Happen Tomorrow" shows a couple of years ago.  

May 14, 2008 5:11 PM