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Did climate change play a role in Sandy’s strength?

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(MCT) — WASHINGTON — There’s no clear answer to the raging scientific debate over whether climate change, including record low levels of sea ice in the Arctic this summer, influenced Hurricane Sandy’s path and intensity.

But scientists agree on one point: Rising sea levels caused primarily by global warming could worsen the effects of storms such as Sandy, particularly when it comes to storm surge. And that means coastal communities throughout the United States must think about what they will need for protection from such storms.

“The economic impacts go from Florida to Maine,” said Leonard Berry, the director of the Climate Change Initiative at Florida Atlantic University in Boca Raton. “Whatever you think about global warming, it suggests we’re dealing with a different scenario of storms and patterns of rainfall, which is going to be exacerbated by even the small rise in sea level which we’ve already had.”

In hard-hit New York, that means rebuilding flooded subway tunnels in the short term and in the long term, perhaps constructing a multibillion-dollar flood barrier to protect lower Manhattan from the sort of storm surge it experienced during Sandy. In places such as Punta Gorda, Fla., which was swamped by waters from the Gulf of Mexico during Hurricane Charley in 2004, it means rethinking coastal land uses and possibly abandoning some to the sea.

“It’s a longer conversation, but I think part of learning from this is the recognition that climate change is a reality; extreme weather is a reality; it is a reality that we are vulnerable,” New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, a Democrat, said Wednesday in a news briefing about storm recovery. “The frequency is way up. It is not prudent to sit here, I believe, to sit here and say it’s not going to happen again. Protecting this state from coastal flooding is a massive, massive undertaking. But it’s a conversation I think is overdue.”

Climate change got short shrift this election season. It didn’t come up during the presidential or vice presidential debates, a first since 1984. President Barack Obama did mention it during the Democratic National Convention, telling delegates that “climate change is not a hoax” and vowing to approach energy policy in a way that he said would “continue to reduce the carbon pollution that is heating our planet.”

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