Why are the world’s cities sinking? - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
观点 城市

Why are the world’s cities sinking?

The problem of human-induced subsidence is global, urgent and spreading
00:00
{"text":[[{"start":null,"text":"
"}],[{"start":6.33,"text":"The writer is a science commentator"}],[{"start":8.395,"text":"Houston, as the saying nearly goes, has a problem. The city is one of 25 American metropolises to be officially sinking, according to a new study using measurements from space."}],[{"start":21.2,"text":"The issue of subsidence affects not only coastal regions, where sea levels are rising due to climate change, but inland settlements too. Groundwater extraction hollows out the sediment beneath the surface, while urban development piles on the weight above. The net effect is a slow slump into the ground."}],[{"start":43.2,"text":"That slippage can weaken vital infrastructure, including buildings, bridges and sewers; reduce the capacity of underlying aquifers to hold water; increase flood risk; cause sinkholes. The new findings add to the need to take subsidence more seriously, a risk compounded by climate change and urban population growth. Just because the sinking is happening slowly does not mean it should be ignored."}],[{"start":71.939,"text":"Radar satellites can be used to measure ground elevation, by transmitting microwave pulses towards Earth and measuring how long it takes for the echo to return. Leonard Ohenhen, from Columbia University’s Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, teamed up with researchers mostly at Virginia Tech to look at data from the Sentinel-1 satellite collected between 2015 and 2021. By comparing echoes taken at different times over the country’s 28 most populous cities, they were able to calculate how much the ground had moved either up (uplift) or down (subsidence)."}],[{"start":112.37,"text":"As they reported last week in the journal Nature Cities, 25 cities showed subsidence, on average, rather than uplift. Of those, the Texan cities of Houston, Fort Worth and Dallas fared worst, showing average subsidence of more than 4mm per year (oil and gas drilling also empties underlying sediment). Some parts of Houston are sinking by more than 10mm a year."}],[{"start":142.216,"text":"That seems paltry by the standards of other notoriously sinking cities, such as Jakarta and Tehran, but those totemic examples almost demand their own scale. Indonesia has created a new capital, Nusantara, partly because of Jakarta’s subsidence of up to 15cm a year. About half of Jakarta — home to 11mn people — now lies below sea level. Thanks to drought and poor water management, parts of Tehran are sinking by up to 31cm a year; cracks are appearing in roads, world heritage sites and the airport. The current Iranian president has floated the idea of moving the capital, which faces continuing chronic water shortages."}],[{"start":190.542,"text":"But even a modest average rate of sinking, such as those seen in US metropolises, can mask variation, with some subsidence hotspots occurring in regions with an overall uplift. “From an urban risk perspective, the cities with the greatest spatial variability may experience the greatest hazard to urban infrastructure,” the authors write, pointing out that structures can silently weaken as neighbouring areas move and twist under differential subsidence."}],[{"start":223.067,"text":"Natural factors matter too, such as seismic hazards, soil composition and “glacial isostatic adjustment”, a kind of rebound sinking associated with the historic melting of nearby glaciers (as in New York). But the problem of human-induced subsidence is global, urgent and spreading, particularly in fast-growing cities."}],[{"start":248,"text":"China is a slumping hotspot, with nearly half of its cities, including Beijing, heading downwards. Mexico City is another capital on the slide. One 2024 paper estimated that nearly 2bn people globally were living in subsidence-affected areas and called it “the sinking crisis”."}],[{"start":268,"text":"Current warming aggravates the risk: thawing permafrost is causing subsidence in Alaska; rising seas combine with falling land to make flooding more frequent; climate-induced drought stokes demand for ever more water extraction, causing further destabilisation."}],[{"start":288,"text":"Ohenhen cites Lagos as another megacity under siege. Nigeria’s low-lying coastal metropolis, built on water-saturated sediment, now boasts tilted buildings, cracked pillars and walls, and even collapsed buildings. When structures fail, he points out, subsidence is rarely if ever considered; investigations focus on building codes, engineering problems or human error."}],[{"start":317.532,"text":"But, Ohenhen says, “the compounding effect of subsidence may push parts of the city towards sudden tipping points . . . cities can and should act”. Mitigations include capturing surface water to reduce the need to extract groundwater; recharging aquifers; limiting development in subsidence-prone areas."}],[{"start":341.05,"text":"It can work: stricter water management introduced from the 1950s put the brakes on subsidence in Tokyo and Osaka. We may be in a global slouch — but we can yet rise."}],[{"start":null,"text":"

Climate Capital

\"\"

Where climate change meets business, markets and politics. Explore the FT’s coverage here.

Are you curious about the FT’s environmental sustainability commitments? Find out more about our science-based targets here

"}],[{"start":360.15,"text":""}]],"url":"https://audio.ftmailbox.cn/album/a_1747625848_8929.mp3"}
版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

日本首相辞职为新领导人让路

石破茂辞职为分裂的自民党内部党首选举铺路。

美国是否已经陷入经济衰退?

对美国经济的广大领域而言,确实如此。

AI会“杀死”流行巨星吗?

技术可能取代表演者的前景触动了敏感神经——但这些担忧真的有据可依吗?

AI网红的崛起

计算机生成的人物形象正日益受到品牌青睐,但可能对真人代言人构成威胁。

意大利漏水的管道让西西里人开始囤水

意大利是欧洲水损失最多的国家,而干旱使这一问题更加突出。

人力资源不是一般人能干的

这些天,我们最爱讨厌的人真是倒了大霉。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×