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    Explore "floodprevention" with insightful episodes like "Lessons From A Country On The Front Lines Of Climate Change", "What Cities Should Learn From California's Flooding" and "How to make sense of extreme weather" from podcasts like ""Consider This from NPR", "Short Wave" and "TED Climate"" and more!

    Episodes (3)

    Lessons From A Country On The Front Lines Of Climate Change

    Lessons From A Country On The Front Lines Of Climate Change
    The United Nations says time is running out to avoid the worst effects of climate change. At the same time, countries like Bangladesh have no choice but to adapt to an already changing climate.

    Bangladesh is prone to flooding from rising sea levels and melting glaciers. And it is in the path of some of the world's most powerful cyclones.

    NPR's Lauren Frayer reports from northern Bangladesh on how the country is becoming a hot spot for climate solutions.

    In participating regions, you'll also hear a local news segment to help you make sense of what's going on in your community.

    Email us at considerthis@npr.org.

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    What Cities Should Learn From California's Flooding

    What Cities Should Learn From California's Flooding
    Winter storms have flooded parts of California, broken levees and forced thousands to evacuate. Climate change is altering the historic weather patterns that infrastructure like reservoirs and waterways were built to accommodate. Urban planners and engineers are rethinking underlying assumptions baked into buildings and water systems in order to adapt to the changing climate. Today, NPR climate correspondent Lauren Sommer walks us through three innovations happening around the country to help cities adapt to shifting and intensifying weather patterns.

    Heard of other cool engineering innovations? We'd love to hear about it! Email us at shortwave@npr.org.

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    How to make sense of extreme weather

    How to make sense of extreme weather

    From raging wildfires in Australia to sub-zero winter storms in Texas, we’re seeing a rise in extreme weather across the globe. But how can we tell what’s caused by climate change, and what’s just bad weather? To answer this question, Dan breaks down the differences between weather and climate—what they are, how we predict them, and what those predictions can tell us. And then we visit a country that should LITERALLY be underwater to see how they’ve used human ingenuity to stay afloat, and what we can learn from them to do the same. Find the text transcript for this episode at go.ted.com/TC3

    TED Climate is produced and edited by Sheena Ozaki, mixed by Sam Bair, and hosted by Dan Kwartler. This episode adapted two lessons originally produced in animated form by the TED-Ed team. "Is the weather actually becoming more extreme?" was written by Ramalingam Saravanan with support from Emma Bryce. "Why isn’t the Netherlands underwater?" was written by Stefan Al with support from Alex Gendler. Both lessons had editorial support from Dan Kwartler. Our fact-checker was Eden Girma. And special thanks to Alex Rosenthal, Gerta Xhelo, Michelle Quint, Banban Cheng, and Anna Phelan.