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NOAA and the Ports Association of Louisiana Prepare, Respond, Recover, Improve Repeat Tim Osborn NOAA

NOAA and the Ports Association of Louisiana Prepare, Respond, Recover, Improve Repeat

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NOAA and the Ports Association of Louisiana Prepare, Respond, Recover, Improve Repeat. Tim Osborn NOAA. Hell! there ain’t no rules around here! We are tryin’ to accomplish somep’n! Thomas Edison. PREPARE. Arrival, Size, Severity, Coastal Flooding Impact. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: NOAA and the Ports Association of Louisiana Prepare, Respond, Recover, Improve Repeat

NOAA and the Ports Association of Louisiana

Prepare, Respond, Recover, Improve

Repeat

Tim OsbornNOAA

Page 2: NOAA and the Ports Association of Louisiana Prepare, Respond, Recover, Improve Repeat

Hell! there ain’t no rules around here! We are tryin’ to accomplish somep’n!

Thomas Edison

Page 3: NOAA and the Ports Association of Louisiana Prepare, Respond, Recover, Improve Repeat

PREPARE

Arrival, Size, Severity, Coastal Flooding Impact

Page 4: NOAA and the Ports Association of Louisiana Prepare, Respond, Recover, Improve Repeat

Evacuation of Entergy Utility Trucks from Port Fourchon with the Approach of Hurricane Ike- A Category 2 Hurricane that Made Landfall in Southeast Coastal Texas

Source- Robby Wilson, Port Fourchon

Old Highway LA-1New Elevated Causeway of LA-1 Connecting Port Fourchon to the New Leeville Bridge

Page 5: NOAA and the Ports Association of Louisiana Prepare, Respond, Recover, Improve Repeat

South Lafourche Levee District Levee Southern Extent During Hurricane Ike

South Lafourche Flood Gate now converted to a Lock

Flooded Homes outside South Lafourche Levee District Levees and Flooded Highway LA-1 to Port Fourchon and Grand Isle Hurricane Ike Inundation South Lafourche Parish

Page 6: NOAA and the Ports Association of Louisiana Prepare, Respond, Recover, Improve Repeat

Hurricane Ike Flooding Eastern Louisiana

Page 7: NOAA and the Ports Association of Louisiana Prepare, Respond, Recover, Improve Repeat

Caminada Headland Inundated by Tropical System, July 2010

Page 8: NOAA and the Ports Association of Louisiana Prepare, Respond, Recover, Improve Repeat

RESPOND

Coordinate, Inform, Coordinate, Inform…..

Page 9: NOAA and the Ports Association of Louisiana Prepare, Respond, Recover, Improve Repeat
Page 10: NOAA and the Ports Association of Louisiana Prepare, Respond, Recover, Improve Repeat

RECOVER

Page 11: NOAA and the Ports Association of Louisiana Prepare, Respond, Recover, Improve Repeat

REPEAT

Page 12: NOAA and the Ports Association of Louisiana Prepare, Respond, Recover, Improve Repeat

Coodinate-

Timing

Impact

Access

Priorities

Page 13: NOAA and the Ports Association of Louisiana Prepare, Respond, Recover, Improve Repeat

NWS SLOSH storm surge model

Weak Tropical Storms at Port FourchonWill Inundate LA 1 to the Point of Closure- Source NWS New Orleans Baton Rouge – Category 0 Storm Surge Slosh Ouput.

Grand Isle

Port Fourchon

GallianoWater level reference to datum - NAVD88

Page 14: NOAA and the Ports Association of Louisiana Prepare, Respond, Recover, Improve Repeat

NOAA OAR, 2012. Global Sea Level Rise Scenarios for the United States National Climate Assessment, NOAA Technical Report OAR CPO-1, NOAA Climate Program Office, Silver Spring, MD, December 2012, 29pp.http://www.cpo.noaa.gov/reports/sealevel The high scenario shows global sea level rise by 2100 of 2.0m (about 6.5 ft.);

an intermediate high scenario of 1.2m (about 4 ft.);

an intermediate - low scenario of 0.5m (about 1.6 ft.);

and a low scenario of 0.2m (0.7 ft.)

Page 15: NOAA and the Ports Association of Louisiana Prepare, Respond, Recover, Improve Repeat

The National Climate Assessment

                                                                          

                         The National Climate Assessment (NCA) is being conducted under the authority of the Global Change Research Act (GCRA) of 1990. The GCRA requires a report to the President and the Congress every four years that integrates, evaluates, and interprets the findings of the U.S. Global Change Research Program (USGCRP). The Act requires assessment of the effects of global change (both human-induced and natural) on the natural environment, agriculture, energy production and use, land and water resources, transportation, human health and welfare, human social systems, and biological diversity. The time periods for analysis include current conditions as well as projections of major trends for the subsequent 25 to 100 years.National climate assessments provide status reports about climate change science and impacts. They are based on observations collected across the country as well as research that uses projections from climate system and other models. The NCA incorporates advances in the understanding of climate science into larger social, ecological, and policy systems, and provides integrated analyses of impacts and vulnerability.The NCA integrates scientific information from multiple sources and highlights key findings and significant gaps in our knowledge. It also helps the federal government prioritize climate research investments that will provide science for use by communities around the country to plan more sustainably for our future.

Page 16: NOAA and the Ports Association of Louisiana Prepare, Respond, Recover, Improve Repeat

Source- LSU Center for Coastal Studies