| (As a clarification, that's "global warming causing climate change".) When you write "deal with", do you mean to include mass migrations, loss of populated areas, and civil unrest? Because that's how we dealt with, for example, the Dust Bowl. One example is that there does not seem any way to save Miami in its current form, using today's technology or any realistic technology we could develop. Quoting https://www.businessinsider.com/miami-floods-sea-level-rise-... : > “Miami as we know it today — there’s virtually no scenario under which you can imagine it existing at the end of the century,” Goodell said. “It may be some smaller version of Miami that incorporates platform houses and floating structures.” ... > And while there is much that Florida can learn from these other places, no one has answers to looming threats like water rising through the ground underneath. “The solutions that are going to be used to save cities like Miami Beach probably haven’t been developed yet,” Mowry said. Or from https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20170403-miamis-fight-aga... : > But the question isn’t whether this work will save every community: it won’t. Even those tasked with making their cities resilient admit that, at some point in the future, certain areas here will no longer be “viable” places to live. Rather, the challenge is to do enough to ensure that the economy as a whole continues to thrive and that tourists still come to enjoy the sun, sand – and swelling sea. We can "deal with" that by mass migration to move. Or letting them die. But I don't think that's what you mean? |