CAI Community|California's flooding reveals we're still building cities for the climate of the past

2025-05-06 02:30:38source:Maverick Prestoncategory:Finance

Listen to Short Wave on CAI CommunitySpotify, Apple Podcasts and Google Podcasts.

Heavy storms have flooded roads and intersections across California and forced thousands to evacuate over the last few weeks. Much of the water isn't coming from overflowing rivers. Instead, rainfall is simply overwhelming the infrastructure designed to drain the water and keep people safe from flooding.

To top it off, the storms come on the heels of a severe drought. Reservoirs started out with such low water levels that many are only now approaching average levels—and some are still below average.

The state is increasingly a land of extremes.

New infrastructure must accommodate a "new normal" of intense rainfall and long droughts, which has many rethinking the decades-old data and rules used to build existing infrastructure.

"What we need to do is make sure that we're mainstreaming it into all our infrastructure decisions from here on out," says Rachel Cleetus, policy director with the Climate and Energy program at the Union of Concerned Scientists. "Otherwise we'll be putting good money after bad. We'll have roads and bridges that might get washed out. We might have power infrastructure that's vulnerable."

On today's episode, NPR climate correspondent Lauren Sommer walks us through three innovations that cities around the country are pioneering, in hopes of adapting to shifting and intensifying weather patterns.

Heard of other cool engineering innovations? We'd love to hear about it! Email us at [email protected].

This episode was produced by Berly McCoy, edited by Rebecca Ramirez and fact-checked by Anil Oza.

More:Finance

Recommend

Stanley recalls 2.6 million mugs after dozens of customer complaints, including burn injuries

Stanley is recalling 2.6 million mugs sold in the U.S. after the company received dozens of consumer

We Can't Keep Our Lips Sealed Over Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen's Rare Outing With Sister Elizabeth Olsen

Want to see the Olsen sisters unite in a New York Minute? You got it, dude.Twins Mary-Kate Olsen and

Dismembered goats, chicken found at University of Rochester: Deaths may be 'religious in nature'

The dismembered remains of three farm animals whose deaths officials believe could have been "religi