14 lines
1.1 KiB
JSON
14 lines
1.1 KiB
JSON
{
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"HubID": "5226",
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"Date": "4/19/2025",
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"HubTags": [
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"External Platform Posts",
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"Future Map"
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],
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"Contacts": "",
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"Companies": "",
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"File": "",
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"Image": "5226__Image_URL.jpg",
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"Summary": "<p>This one chart says a lot about our future and how we should plan. Sea level rise isn’t just happening—it’s accelerating. From 1993 to 2002, sea levels rose an average of 2.1 mm/year. From 2015 to 2024? That pace more than doubled to 4.7 mm/year. This trend has real consequences for real estate, infrastructure, and population migration: Don’t just think coastal — even low-lying inland areas are at risk from flooding due to storm surge and upstream river overflow. Climate extremes will make some areas increasingly unlivable—heat domes, water shortages, hurricane and tornado alleys, and more. Northern inland states may become the next real estate frontier in the U.S.—offering safer, more temperate zones for future living. Southern migration is strong today, but could reverse rapidly as risk perceptions shift. What does that mean for property values and tax bases in those states? <span></span></p>",
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"Notes": ""
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} |