To learn more or opt-out, read our An unfinished flood barrier system isn’t ready for rising sea levelsAn extreme high tide inundated 85 percent of Venice on Tuesday night, drowning some parts of the city in six feet of water. Schools closed, a city council meeting was canceled. Sign up for the Venise : le "projet Moïse" pour sauver la ville de la montée des eaux patauge, entre problèmes techniques et corruption. And experts familiar with these problems say the city could have spared itself from today’s damage. Floodwaters pushed boats ashore and swept through buildings, swiping groceries off shelves and knocking library books into murky pools.

How the city navigates these issues moving forward could decide its future. Residents and tourists navigated streets in waist-high waters. In the November flood, the tide surged to 6.5 feet.Water levels have reached 6.14 feet in Venice, Italy, the second-highest level ever recorded in the city. Venice’s historic flooding blamed on human failure and climate changeAmazon’s Echo Studio speaker includes a free Echo Show 5 and Philips Hue bulbAll for the lowest price we’ve seen the Studio sell forSave on Genki’s Covert Dock, preowned games, and more this weekendAlso, this is your last chance to save $250 on the OnePlus 7 ProGoogle Nest and Eero’s mesh Wi-Fi systems are steeply discountedIt’s a good time to buy if you want to bulk up your home connectionYou can get the upgraded OnePlus 7 Pro for $450 right nowThis model with 8GB of RAM and 256GB of storage usually costs $699HP’s latest 15-inch Omen gaming laptop is $300 off at Best BuyIt packs in a six-core processor, the RTX 2060, a 300Hz refresh rate display, and more Venice has spent more than $6 billion on a flood-barrier system nicknamed MOSE (a reference to the biblical story of Moses’ parting of the sea). But having grown up in Venice and survived the historic 1966 flood when she was in high school, she says, “I just trust the resilience of the city to survive.” City officials estimated the total flood damage at to be more than a billion dollars.The barriers are designed to protect Venice from tides as high as 10 feet. Jane da Mosto, an environmental scientist and executive director of the NGO We Are Here Venice, says that the biggest contributing factors to the destruction this week aren’t from Mother Nature but from human failures. An anti-flood system that was supposed to start working in Venice in 2011 – and could have protected the iconic city from more than a billion dollars in … But it’s over budget, behind schedule, and beleaguered with a corruption scandal. The interplay between the Moon and wind around this time of year churns up what locals call Climate change is adding to the overflow of water. “The point here is that the danger is imminent, and the longer you wait, the worse it gets,” he tells “The problem is extremely complex, I really hope that this is a wake up call for the people who are in charge,” says Paola Rizzoli, a professor of physical oceanography at MIT who, along with Bras, previously served as a consultant on the MOSE project. ©2020 FOX News Network, LLC. On Friday, some of them rode in small boats near the test site and waved protest banners, while police in speedboats cut swift paths among the protesters' boats as tensions flared.The protesters contend that because the world's sea levels are rising in general, the movable barrier system will become obsolete as the Adriatic Sea's level eventually rises to the point that waters will be higher than what the barriers were designed to hold back.Get all the stories you need-to-know from the most powerful name in news delivered first thing every morning to your inboxThis material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Environmentalists in small boats near the test site of a trial run of the anti-flood system wave protest banners as police speed boats head their way. The project that broke ground in 2003 and initially had a 2011 deadline, would have provided protection from tides up to 10 feet tall.

Last November, Venice suffered its worst flooding in more than 50 years.Floodwaters invaded St. Mark's Basilica and also poured into homes, hotels, stores and restaurants in the city, which lives off tourism. That project … All rights reserved. Exceptionally high tides similar to this one have taken place in the city roughly once every five years or so. Ces digues sont prévues sur les trois entrées de la lagune de Venise : Lido, Malamocco et Chioggia, comme l'expliqu… This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten,

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MOSE was designed to protect the city over the next 50 to 100 years, according to Bras, who served as the chair of an oversight committee for the project from 1995 to 2013. Concrètement, il s'agit de 78 digues flottantes qui se relèvent et barrent l'accès à la lagune en cas de montée des eaux de l'Adriatique. Environmentalists worry that it could harm the lagoon’s ecosystems. And as sea levels keep rising, the scheme’s utility comes with an expiration date. “We need to improve the decision making. Mose (Mosè veut dire Moïse en italien) est l'acronyme de Module expérimental électromécanique.

We need to improve the planning.

Former mayor Giorgio Orsoni The flood barrier system has been controversial for other reasons. In 2014, The Associated Press reported, investigators revealed a system of bribes and kickbacks — nearly $6.5 billion overall has been poured into the planning and construction of the anti-flood system.