As storms and floods become more frequent, intense, and expensive in terms of finances and lost lives, city life is becoming more precarious.
Amit Prothi, the director general of the Coalition for Disaster Resilient Infrastructure, has spent decades working on making communities more resilient across more than 15 countries in North America, Asia, and Europe. He said that American infrastructure – like power lines, water drainage systems, and housing development – and building policies that govern such projects may not account for the changing risks brought about by climate change.
But there are several strategies U.S. cities can put in place to become more resilient. As a bonus, implementing these strategies can also make cities more beautiful and community-oriented – and in most cases, are also financial no-brainers.
Ya let’s spend trillions of dollars to completely rebuild cities.
If you want to engineer your way out of climate disasters this probably isn’t the way.