
The megaflood, next time in California
UCLA researchers say California is overdue for a megaflood that would effectively turn the state into a "vast inland sea." Climate change isn't helping this inevitability.
Headlines From The Times · Gustavo Arellano, Denise Guerra, Shannon Lin, Kasia Broussalian, Ashlea Brown, David Toledo, Mario Diaz, Mark Nieto, Mike Heflin, Kinsee Morlan, Jazmín Aguilera, Shani O. Hilton, Roberto Reyes, Heba Elorbany, Nicolas Perez
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Show Notes
Few people associate urban and suburban Southern California with floods anymore, mostly because many of its rivers were dammed up or transformed into concrete gulches long ago. But scientists say a megaflood could hit the entire state and would submerge cities, hitting communities of color particularly hard.
The state is nowhere near prepared for that. Today, our Masters of Disasters talk about this upcoming flood, what it could mean for a rising sea and more. Read the full transcript here.
Host: Gustavo Arellano
Guests: L.A. Times earthquake-COVID reporter Ron Lin, L.A. Times coastal reporter Rosanna Xia, and L.A. Times environmental reporter Louis Sahagún
More reading:
Major flood would hit Los Angeles Black communities disproportionately hard, study finds
Risk of catastrophic California ‘megaflood’ has doubled due to global warming, researchers say
More than 400 toxic sites in California are at risk of flooding from sea level rise