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Impacts of Climate Change on Redwood City <br />What's Already Being Experienced <br />Climate change has already affected and will continue to affect San Mateo County. <br />Climate change will have many different effects on society and on the natural world. Plant and animal species are <br />adapting to changing environments by migrating to new areas. As species move, they bring diseases with them to <br />farms and human populations. Some species become extinct due to either human -caused climate change or to <br />human activities such as habitat destruction or toxic pollution. <br />The region's annual maximum temperature increased 1.7°F from 1950-2005. <br />�V <br />Coastal fog, which is critical to the region's climate and ecosystems, is less frequent than ever before. <br />Sea level has risen over 8 inches in the last century. <br />* The forceful 2015-2016 EI Nino weather pattern, which was one of the three largest in history, resulted in <br />unprecedented outer coast beach erosion due to winter wave energy that was more than 50% greater than a <br />typical winter. <br />The 2012-2016 statewide drought led to the most drastic moisture shortages in the last 1,200 years, resulting <br />in a 1 -in -500 -year low in Sierra snowpack. This drastically reduced snowpack resulted in $2.1 billion in <br />m economic losses, 21,000 jobs lost statewide in agricultural and recreational sectors, and a continuing <br />exhaustion of groundwater sources. <br />Future Projections <br />Even if considerable efforts to reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions are conducted, San Mateo County will <br />likely see substantial temperature increases by 2050. By 2100, temperature rise will be dependent on the <br />emissions scenario. (For more information about the four emissions scenarios, see Appendix B.4.) <br />Precipitation in San Mateo County will continue to vary each year. The differences between wet and dry years <br />are projected to become more extreme and damaging in the coming decades. If no action is taken to combat <br />climate change, the Sierra snowpack, a critical source of water for the State, will decrease by an average of 64 <br />percent by the end of the century.20 <br />As temperature continues to increase, it is anticipated to cause longer and more intense California droughts, <br />posing major problems for government operations, water supplies, ecosystems, agriculture, and recreation. <br />Studies suggest that even with significant emissions reductions, it is inevitable that there will be at least 6 feet of <br />sea -level rise over the next several centuries due to the delayed effects of climate change. <br />City of Redwood City Climate Action Plan 22 <br />