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Leonard P. Zakim Bunker Hill Bridge in Boston, Massachusetts. Image credit: Wsvan, CC BY-SA 3.0, http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0, via Wikimedia Commons

Previous Transportation Content

Initial content in the U.S. Climate Resilience Toolkit was developed by interagency teams of subject mater experts. To keep the science current, we now point to the most recent National Climate Assessment content for each topic. We've preserved our initial content below.

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  • Increases in heavy precipitation, hot days, and coastal flooding are affecting the reliability and capacity of the U.S. transportation system.
  • The risk of major impacts to roads, bridges, port facilities, and railways near our coasts is increasing with sea level rise. More than 60,000 miles of coastal roads are already vulnerable to damage from extreme storms and hurricanes. Projections show that additional bridges, tunnels, and airports will become vulnerable as sea level rises.
  • Extreme weather events and high-tide flooding block traffic and require rerouting of regional freight patterns. Drivers already log 100 million vehicle-hours of delay due to high-tide flooding every year. Without changes, this number is projected to increase substantially.
  • Supply chains transport raw materials to manufacturing facilities and distribute products to consumers. Societal and economic consequences of extreme weather impacts can interrupt the transportation system and disrupt the flow of supply chains. These changes can have a disproportionate affect on vulnerable populations, especially in urban settings.
  • Challenges to the global transportation system—the complexity of intersecting networks, aging infrastructure, and dependencies on the energy and communications sectors—can be compounded by the impacts of climate change.

Adapted from the Transportation chapters of the 3rd and 4th National Climate Assessments

Summary

The U.S. economy depends on transportation infrastructure to get people where they want to go and to enable companies to gather materials and distribute goods. Climate-related disruptions of these systems can impede the continual flow of people and goods, leading to delays and product shortages, which can impact public health and local economies.

References

  1. U.S. Department of Transportation, Bureau of Transportation Statistics: National Transportation Statistics.
  2. American Public Transportation Association, Public Transportation Fact Book.
  3. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Navigation and Civil Works Decision Support Center: The U.S. Waterway System: Transportation Facts & Information.

Contributors

  • Art Rypinski (DOT), Team Lead
  • Brennan Conway (GSA), Co-Lead
  • Rob Hyman (FHA)
  • Jae Chung (CEQ)