In a significant shift of emphasis, the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers (USACE) has adopted new policy guidelines that
recognize the risk posed by rising sea levels. Set forth in a
July 1, 2009,
Corps of Engineers circular, the policy directs designers
of civil engineering projects to consider not just historic
rates of sea level rise, but also possible "intermediate" and
"high" projections for rising sea levels over the next 50
years.
E&E Publishing's GreenWire covers the story
("
Army Corps: New policy forces project designers to consider
rising seas," by Taryn Luntz), as does the Sacramento Bee
("Delta
levee projects must now prepare for rising sea level," by
Matt Weiser).
"There is no grandfathering," said Corps official Kathleen
White. "It's going to apply to everything. We are going to have
to undergo a large effort to evaluate our projects to see what
this guidance may mean to them."
Design modifications could include spending more now to
fortify public works against the risk of high-range flood
predictions. Or, projects might be designed to easily allow
future modifications in the event the more dire forecasts come
to pass. Said Corps official Jeffrey Gebert, who participated
in drafting the new policy, "You don't want to make stupid
large investments that are difficult or impossible to
undo."