By Delaney Reynolds, The Sink or Swim Project
Today, more than ever, science and scientists are the key to our collective futures. Doctors and nurses are heroically saving lives while putting their own lives at risk. Chemists and biologists will soon be saviors when they develop treatments and a vaccine.
As we seek expert solutions to the pandemic, it is my hope that the COVID-19 crisis will make clear the profound importance of science and scientists to our society. And when it comes to our climate crisis, respect for science can help us all unite to solve the crisis by better understanding the scientific research that predicts, for example, that coastal communities including South Florida are at risk of extinction from sea-level rise.
Consider a new scientific study that illustrates how grave the future is unless society quickly moves away from fossil fuels and embraces sustainable energy everywhere. Researchers from the University of Illinois, University of Hawaii, and the U.S. government studied over 200 tide gauges and concluded that in about 30 years the accelerating speed of sea-level rise will cause significant flooding every year for over 70% of the U.S. coastline, according to the study published in Scientific Reports.
And by 2100, flooding thatâs now considered a once in a lifetime event will become a daily high-tide occurrence for more than 90% of coastal communities.
These scenarios threaten to cause billions of dollars in damage, along with the very viability of some communities to exist. Major cities such as Honolulu, New Orleans, and yes, Miami, the place I call home, will become increasingly vulnerable to flooding and stronger storms fueled by the global heating caused by human activity. The time is past to listen to the science and act accordingly.
Thankfully, the worldâs youth get it. We are deeply worried about the climate crisis and those concerns permeate political affiliation, race, religion, or economic standing.
Consider the diversity of young people profiled in the April National Geographic article highlighting young climate activists from Rwanda, Nepal, Sweden, Canada, and England. I was featured in the article too.
We embrace the science and want to see our governments quickly lead us into a sustainable future before itâs too late for places we love like No Name Key, Miami, and the Everglades.
And thatâs why, in April 2018, seven of my friends and I filed a lawsuit, Reynolds v. State of Florida, against the State of Florida, Gov. Ron DeSantis, and several other state officials and agencies.
We believe that Floridians have a constitutional right to a stable climate and that the state government is contributing to our climate catastrophe by supporting an antiquated energy system based on fossil fuels. They are demonstrating a deliberate indifference to our fundamental rights to life, liberty, property, and the pursuit of happiness. In doing so, they are violating the Florida Constitution.
We are asking the judiciary to order the government to protect our constitutional rights and create a climate recovery plan to transition Floridaâs energy system to one based on clean energy solutions before itâs too late. We believe that when government actions infringe on our constitutional rights, then we must look to the judiciary for protection.
Like the amazing scientists responsible for keeping us safe during the COVID-19 crisis, our legal system should protect our constitutional rights. And just as our scientists will solve the pandemic, it is my hope that at our first hearing, now scheduled for June 1, that Floridaâs court system will protect our constitutional rights to a stable climate before itâs too late.
Delaney Reynolds is a 20-year-old marine science student at the University of Miami and the founder of The Sink or Swim Project miamisearise.com
âThe Invading Seaâ is the opinion arm of the Florida Climate Reporting Network, a collaborative of news organizations across the state focusing on the threats posed by the warming climate.