This morning we rolled out our new sea level rise education
project at a press event in Charleston.
The project, called South Carolina Businesses Acting on Rising Seas
(SCBARS), is a partnership with the American Sustainable Business Council that
is providing the funding.
In the last several weeks the SCBARS team has been
identifying businesses up and down our coast that NOAA-supplied data indicates
are expected to be directly impacted by a 6-foot rise in sea level by
2100. We’ve been knocking on their doors
and educating the owners about the threat.
We ask them to post signs for the tourists to make them
aware of the future danger. Our goal is
to turn the tourists into an army of advocates for protecting our coast by
asking them to go to SCBARS.org. From
the website people can send letters to their Congressional delegation and
President calling on them to take action to reduce carbon pollution and
transition the U.S. to a clean energy economy.
The response from these businesses has been very
encouraging. This week we start delivering
the signs and hopefully will get permission to place blue tape on the inside or
outside of their buildings showing where the high tide will be in 2100 if
nothing is done about climate change.
While this was going on in Charleston, I was meeting with
the Myrtle Beach Sun News editorial board to tell them about SCBARS.
It was a good day for our small business tourism industry
and with the help of our SCBARS project hopefully there will be more good days
for future generations of coastal small businesses.
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