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As a warming planet generates more monster hurricanes that can rapidly intensify, researchers are whipping up winds and waves in a giant tank on Virginia Key to improve building designs and better forecasts.
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A citizen petition drive that aimed at limiting big stormwater projects in Key Biscayne appears to have collected enough signatures to go on the November ballot, the Elections Department said Wednesday.
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More than a dozen communities across the state have active voluntary home buyout programs designed to reduce damage from flooding and storm surge.
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Following the devastating landfalls of two major hurricanes that spread catastrophic flooding across Florida, SA国际传谋 sat down with the head of the National Hurricane Center's storm surge unit.
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Even at about $400,000, Dr. Meghan Martin said it鈥檚 the easiest and most affordable option she has.
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Researchers at the University of Florida found that nature-based "living shoreline" projects significantly reduced wave energy and were largely undamaged during Hurricane Idalia last year.
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A look at the factors that allowed a compact storm such as Idalia to send storm surge down Florida's west coast and the strokes of luck that prevented worse damage.
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A rare blue supermoon could play a role in an unfolding disaster as Hurricane Idalia takes aim at Florida's west coast.
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A brand new set of protections for Miami-Dade鈥檚 storm-prone coast is once again on the table after the county agreed to move forward with a new coastal protection study.
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To protect coastal bases, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) has enlisted corals, oysters and three international teams of scientists to develop 鈥渉ybrid reefs,鈥 to break up damaging waves.
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Hurricane Ian鈥檚 devastation on the Southwest Florida coast sent a chill up the spine of anyone in Miami worried about the next big one 鈥 and it sharpened the focus of federal planners working to design and build new barriers to avoid a similar outcome for Miami-Dade.
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As federal agencies and local governments reassess flood zones and incorporate new technology, data on sea-level rise and the fact that the concrete jungle doesn鈥檛 absorb as much water as the natural environment, they鈥檝e concluded that vast swaths of South Florida 鈥 particularly inland areas 鈥 are vulnerable to crippling storm surge and flooding from rain.