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Part 1 California submerging: Rising seas are claiming its famed coast faster than scientists imagined -
Part 2 SHORING UP THE STATE: Is California’s response to rising seas enough? -
Part 3 Shifting sands: The struggle to save California’s washed-up beaches -
Part 4 Battling rising seas, Louisiana ‘gets on with it’—minus California-style climate talk
International airports in San Francisco and Oakland will face flooding, rendering them unusable. Housing perched on fast-eroding coastal bluffs in Pacifica and elsewhere will continue to crash into the sea. Malibu’s Broad Beach will dwindle into a seldom-seen slice of sand, its name an oxymoron. Flooding in the Delta will overwhelm rivers and strain levees critical to California’s water supply. Power plants, nuclear waste sites and other sensitive waterside sites need to be fortified or lost. Roads, bridges and railways along the coast from Mendocino to San Diego will be abandoned and relocated inland. San Francisco’s Embarcadero and low-lying cities such as Huntington Beach will flood more frequently and more severely. More than 42,000 homes in California will be under water—not merely flooded, but with seawater over roofs.
“California has a peerless capacity to turn over problems until they are smooth and shiny. Understanding comes first, with action often a distant and expensive second.”
“California is in a great place for being willing to call the hard question and not shying away.”

Zillow estimates 2 million homes underwater by 2100–as in fish swimming through the den.
Rising Seas
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Part 1 California submerging: Rising seas are claiming its famed coast faster than scientists imagined A slow-moving emergency is lapping at California’s shores— climate-driven sea-level rise that experts now predict could elevate the water in coastal areas up to 10 feet in just 70 years. -
Next: Part 2 SHORING UP THE STATE: Is California’s response to rising seas enough? For Will Travis, it began 12 years ago, with an eye-opening article in the New Yorker magazine about rising seas and the widespread flooding and dislocation that would bring. -
Part 3 Shifting sands: The struggle to save California’s washed-up beaches Tracking sand from the Oregon border to south San Diego is serious business. There’s too much sediment in some places, clogging harbors and waterways, and too little in others, shrinking beaches and exposing homes and critical infrastructure. -
Part 4 Battling rising seas, Louisiana ‘gets on with it’—minus California-style climate talk Unlike blue-state California, deeply crimson Louisiana shuns climate talk as it gets on with the task of battling rising seas.
