Bearable Ownable Land In 2100
Aug. 26th, 2016 03:32 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
In my last post
symbioid posted a link to a NY Times article on the increasing temperatures in the US.
http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2016/08/20/sunday-review/climate-change-hot-future.html?_r=0
The map for 2100 shows most of the US will have 5+ days of 100+ degree temps, whereas right now most of the US barely reaches 100+ ever.
This looks bad, but it looks even worse when you lay this data onto my "Ownable Land" map. This is because a lot of those areas that will stay cool in the US in the coming 80 years are not ownable, and thus not livable (much of them are mountains).
I've made a new map here to show this. The blue areas are the ownable land in 2100 that will have <5 days per year with 100+ degree temps. Looks like property in Door County would be a good investment long term.

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http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2016/08/20/sunday-review/climate-change-hot-future.html?_r=0
The map for 2100 shows most of the US will have 5+ days of 100+ degree temps, whereas right now most of the US barely reaches 100+ ever.
This looks bad, but it looks even worse when you lay this data onto my "Ownable Land" map. This is because a lot of those areas that will stay cool in the US in the coming 80 years are not ownable, and thus not livable (much of them are mountains).
I've made a new map here to show this. The blue areas are the ownable land in 2100 that will have <5 days per year with 100+ degree temps. Looks like property in Door County would be a good investment long term.
