Podcast

The ecological Ponzi scheme’ putting Florida at risk

Hurricane Ian showed how unprepared Florida is for more frequent climate extremes.

On The Carbon Copy podcast this week:

Michael Grunwald is an energy and climate journalist who lives in south Florida. He loves Florida. But he also loves to poke fun at Florida’s poor planning. In 2017, he wrote a piece for Politico about Cape Coral, a boomtown built on swampland that is uniquely vulnerable to hurricanes.

Cape Coral is a city of 200,000 people in southwest Florida. It’s basically a wetland nestled next to Fort Myers, one of the fastest-growing areas in the country.

Construction of Cape Coral started in the late 1950s. It was the vision of two brothers who got wealthy peddling a line of hair-grooming products for men. They knew how to sell anything, including a city built on water.

And then, in late September, Hurricane Ian rolled in. The near–Category 5 hurricane knocked out the city’s water supply and electricity, and left most houses underwater. Mike wrote an update to his 2017 piece, reminding readers about the fantasy” propping up southwest Florida.

This week, we talk with Mike Grunwald about Florida’s unwillingness to plan for climate change — and what a solar-powered Florida city that weathered Hurricane Ian with little damage tells us about what’s possible.

The Carbon Copy is a co-production of Post Script Media and Canary Media.