Superstorm Sandy made landfall in northern New Jersey on
October 29, 2012. Serious coastal flooding resulted in significant loss
of life (∼65 casualties) and catastrophic property damage (∼$100
billion) for Metropolitan New York, northern New Jersey and coastal Long
Island. The track and intensity of the storm were relatively
well-predicted a few days in advance by the National Hurricane Center.
But observed flooding during Sandy overran the FEMA-estimated 500-year
flood risk contour in some coastal locations, resulting in FEMA's prompt
removal of their flooding maps from the Web immediately after Sandy made
landfall.
I will briefly discuss the skills of the Stony Brook Storm Surge Research
Group's suite of numerical models that predict winds, tides, waves,
surges and consequential flooding. By varying some key model
parameters, including the relative phasing of the winds and the tides,
the question of whether Sandy was a worst-case scenario is discussed (it
was not!). My presentation concludes with a discussion of the pathways
of "resilience" versus "protection" and how each leads to a very
different outcome. The European systems of coastal protection are shown
to be vastly superior to anything that is currently proposed for
Metropolitan New York and Long Island.
Malcolm J. Bowman is an observational physical oceanographer and a registered professional engineer with more than 40 years of experience in coastal marine science, ocean and water quality modeling, storm surge science and the interactions of the physical environment with marine ecosystems. Dr. Bowman holds B.Sc. and M.Sc. degrees in Physics and Mathematics from the University of Auckland, New Zealand, and a Ph.D. degree in Engineering Physics from the University of Saskatchewan, Canada. His research includes the causes, nature, dynamics and consequences of extreme weather events such as hurricanes and winter nor'easters in an era of climate change and rising sea levels.
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