After Sandy, Investigating a Better Way Forward

As recovery efforts in the wake of Hurricane Sandy continue, a team of experts who study climate and impacts in urban areas are looking for ways to minimize the loss of life and livelihoods the next time an extreme weather event affects coastal cities. Among the team’s members is Drexel’s Dr. Franco Montalto, an assistant professor in the College of Engineering who is looking at how infrastructure can be designed to minimize flooding.

The Consortium on Climate Risk in the Urban Northeast (CCRUN), a NOAA Regional Integrated Sciences and Assessment (RISA) research group with expertise in climate science, oceanography, engineering, green infrastructure, public health and social vulnerability is monitoring the effects of climate and climate change in the region and taking a close look at the aftermath of the storm. The group will work toward a recommendation on how community resilience and disaster-response can be improved.

“While it’s impossible to eliminate all vulnerabilities during a storm of this magnitude, one thing we can do is seek to harness new and enhanced natural green spaces including wetlands, parks and other permeable landscape features to protect people from the next extreme weather event,” says Montalto, a co-investigator who is studying the interaction of the storm with regional green infrastructure networks.

Striking during high astronomical tide, Hurricane Sandy became what meteorologists termed a “superstorm” due to the combination of unusually warm temperatures in the North Atlantic and its interaction with another weather front moving through the eastern United States.

More than 100 people lost their lives during the hurricane. Initial estimates are that flooding and strong winds caused upward of $50 billion in property damage and economic losses on the East Coast. An estimated four million people were without power in the New York metropolitan region and in New York City alone more than 20,000 people may be homeless due to property damage.

Impacts to infrastructure were crippling from New Jersey to Connecticut. Seven subway tunnels under the East River were flooded, with service out for close to a week. According to the group, the long-term impacts of the storm are still being uncovered.

CCRUN scientists at Stevens Institute of Technology used their Storm Surge Warning System to predict the storm tide to within 20 percent, aiding preparations for the flooding. The group hopes to build upon its forecasting of coastal storms and clearly identify to people living in urban areas in the northeast the flood dangers they pose.

“Hurricane Sandy is a wake-up call for the urban Northeast,” says Cynthia Rosenzweig, a researcher from NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies and the principal investigator of CCRUN. “We need to learn from it to improve resilience as climate risks increase due to climate change.”

The team will also examine ways to minimize health risks, such as polluted water sources, in the wake of storm surge flooding, and recommend infrastructure improvements that can limit the amount of flooding that occurs.

In the wake of another destructive storm, Drexel’s Franco Montalto is working with a group of experts from around the country to craft better disaster-preparedness policy.