Water levels in the Great Lakes can fluctuate dramatically
I'm Dr. Anthony Lysowitz, and this is Climate Connections.
Water levels in the Great Lakes can vary dramatically.
Some years they're low, others they're high, and over decades they can fluctuate by up
to six feet.
The lakes go down just long enough for people to forget that they're going to come back
up.
Richard Norton is an urban planner at the University of Michigan.
He's part of the Resilient Great Lakes Coast Program, which is helping coastal communities
in Michigan plan for shifting lake levels.
He says when water levels in the Great Lakes are low for a long time, people might build
too close to the shore.
Then, when water levels rise again, their property could face flooding and erosion.
And as climate change brings more intense storms, with heavy rain and strong waves, the problem
could get worse.
Many landowners along the lakeshore have built sea walls to help protect their properties.
But Norton says that these sea walls only buy limited time.
The day someone puts in a sea wall is the day the lake starts to try and take it back out.
He says that in some locations, the best way to prevent property damage may be to limit
building too close to the shore.
So Norton helps communities along Lake Michigan understand the risks and plan how to best manage
their changing shorelines.
Climate Connections is produced by the Yale Center for Environmental Communication.
To hear more stories like this, visit climateconnections.org.