´ó·˘ÁůşĎ˛Ę

© 2024 WLRN
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

King tides are coming, South Florida. They might bring record-breaking street flooding

A for sale sign sticks out from a flooded street near a water pump, across from a house.
Matias J. Ocner
/
Miami Herald
A for sale sign sticks out from a flooded street near a temporary pump at Little River Pocket Park on Monday, Oct. 30, 2023 in Miami, Fla. Monday was the highest king tide of the year for South Florida, flooding streets, driveways and parks.

South Florida streets could be underwater this week, without a tropical storm or hurricane in sight.

The next few days mark one of the highest tides of the year, known as a king tide. That tide could be strengthened by offshore winds blowing more water ashore, plus a drizzle of rain on already-soggy ground.

“Tide forecasts show that Miami could experience record-breaking high tides from the 16th-23rd, so be prepared for a week of tidal flooding around every high tide,” warned Brian McNoldy, a senior research associate at the University of Miami’s Rosenstiel School of Marine, Atmospheric and Earth Science, .

The worst flooding is expected over the weekend, from Friday until Sunday, when water levels could be as much as 2 feet higher than normal.

That’s enough to swamp streets, docks, yards — and even some very low-lying homes.

A graph showing tide predictions in South Florida.
Brian McNoldy University of Miami
/
Miami Herald
King tides could bring an extra 2 feet of water ashore in coastal South Florida this weekend.

This year’s tides could be worsened by a bluster of wind from the east, Sammy Hadi, a meteorologist at the Miami office of the National Weather Service, .

Some cities offer resources to help residents whose cars are at risk of flooding. Miami Beach, for instance, . Miami has already started to place digital roadway signs to warn drivers about flooding roads. Both cities, as well as Miami-Dade County, also deploy temporary stormwater pumps in low-lying spots to help keep flooding at bay.

Climate amplified

King tides are a natural event. Tides are higher than usual during a full moon, which will occur over the weekend. But as humans keep burning fossil fuels, the atmosphere is warming and sea levels are rising. That pushes king tides even farther onshore, creeping into parks and roads that used to be dry all the time.

To combat that, South Florida cities and counties are spending hundreds of millions of dollars to elevate roads and install permanent stormwater pumps that force the water off the streets and back into canals and Biscayne Bay. They’re also installing devices that allow water to drain off streets but don’t allow it to surge back up through the drains.

It’s a slow and expensive process that hasn’t made it very far along the flood-prone coast. And the clock is ticking. The high-tide floods now happen about three days a year, . By 2050, they could occur 35 days a year.

Discarded carved pumpkins sink into the water of a flooded street.
Emily Michot
/
Miami Herald
Discarded carved pumpkins sink into the water of a flooded street in Miami Shores in November 2021.

This story was produced in partnership with the Florida Climate Reporting Network, a multi-newsroom initiative founded by the Miami Herald, the South Florida Sun Sentinel, The Palm Beach Post, the Orlando Sentinel, WLRN Public Media and the Tampa Bay Times.

Sign up for WLRN’s environment newsletter Field Notes to receive our insider’s guide for living in South Florida’s changing landscape. Get original reporting and recaps, with context, delivered to your inbox every Friday. Subscribe here.

More On This Topic