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- Currently in Philadelphia — September 27, 2023: Sunshine peeking through
Currently in Philadelphia — September 27, 2023: Sunshine peeking through
Plus, Louisiana's new saltwater emergency.
The weather, currently.
Get your sunshine for the week
Writers are supposed to thrive in gloomy, overcast weather, and I do like my morning coffee with a side of introspection and maybe some light brooding. But I could use a break, and I’m sure you could too. The Sun will poke its head out today, breaking up the solid gray skies we’ve had for the last week or so. But there’s more rain on the way tomorrow, which will last until the weekend. In general, things will be nice and cool today with a high of 64˚F and a light breeze. Relative humidity will be high — around 70% in the afternoon — so those with frizzy hair should take note.
— Abe Musselman
What you need to know, currently.
With drought affecting broad swaths of the Mississippi River valley, river levels have dropped so low that saltwater from the Gulf of Mexico is creeping upriver in the Mississippi itself. At its current rate of progression, the Mississippi will turn too salty for water treatment plants at New Orleans to produce drinking water in just a few weeks.
Timeline of saltwater contamination at cities along the Mississippi River (by @NolaGraphicsGuy).
Updates on underwater dams, water barges, pipelines and other efforts to protect water supplies: nola.com/news/environme…
— Tristan Baurick (@tristanbaurick)
10:08 PM • Sep 25, 2023
Since saltwater is more dense than freshwater, the saltwater is actually moving upriver along the riverbed — within the river itself. Federal engineers that maintain the river channel have built a partial dam designed to slow the saltwater’s upstream progression, and increasingly extreme measures will need to be taken once the saltwater reaches New Orleans — like transporting freshwater by barge, and hastily building a water pipeline to the city.
Similar events happened in 1988, 1999, 2012, and again last year — but this one seems especially severe.
As global warming melts ice worldwide, sea level rise will make problems like this worse not just for Louisiana, but all coastal cities worldwide.
#ImageOfTheDay
The Mississippi River is confronted with the consequences of #drought
Louisiana State authorities have requested a federal emergency declaration as saltwater from the Gulf of Mexico is moving upstream, threatening the drinking water supply
⬇️#Sentinel2 image
— Copernicus EU (@CopernicusEU)
9:57 AM • Sep 26, 2023
What you can do, currently.
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One of my favorite organizations, Mutual Aid Disaster Relief, serves as a hub of mutual aid efforts focused on climate action in emergencies — like hurricane season. Find mutual aid network near you and join, or donate to support existing networks: