tangent
Senior Member
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- May 11, 2012
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The way MassDOT defines resiliency isn't just taking into account average sea level rise from climate change. It's also about anticipating the effect of increasingly strong and harsh storms and the extreme storm surge that comes with it.
They know full well that we'd have been in just as shitty a situation as New York if Superstorm Sandy had decided to make landfall on us, which I believe was the original forecast. It's projected that this will be an increasing occurrence and is a good reason to build system-wide redundancy/increased capacity for resilience. This is what they're trying to plan for - this on top of economic growth and viability that they don't want constrained by putting all our eggs in a single large airport in Eastern MA.
This all assumes that economic/population growth is sustainable... which it isn't. We can't afford to replace or make redundant infrastructure for every contingency. If a storm hits the airport it is more efficient to be closed for a few days here and there than to build another airport. If Boston doubled in size, then yes we need a couple more airports.