AI predicts 10 cities most at risk for horror ‘weather vortex and extreme flooding’:
An artificial intelligence has warned parts of the world could suffer horror floods and a terrifying weather vortex if they do not “take action.”
The 10 cities most at risk of falling to climate change pressures were imagined by Bing’s AI, with some parts of the world lacking green energy and flood defences necessary to fend off the elements.
What it means for those living there is a disastrous future, with the AI showcasing what the world could look like 100 years from now if action is not taken against air pollution and climate change. The likes of Port-au-Prince in Haiti and Miami, Florida, were tipped as areas of real risk and it may permanently change how architects plan their cities, and how people live there, with hurricanes and fires ripping through the cities.

Overwhelming floods in Miami may lead to a rise of six inches in sea water before the end of the decade, and 100 years later the catastrophic effects would leave people living in flooded apartments and house boats.
City Monitor representatives said: “With increased sea levels, many of Miami’s buildings will have to be raised to keep them above where the sea will rise. Roads will also have to be elevated to combat potential flooding so that the city can operate as normal.”
Haiti, which has still found itself recovering from a slate of natural disasters, including the devastating 2010 7.1 magnitude earthquake which left around 300,000 dead, was also tipped as a city set to struggle with the climate crisis.

A massive swirling vortex of rain, fire and lightning was depicted, with members of the public crashing through the streets as the waves and waters of a hurricane. Experts claimed: “Haiti will see increased hurricane frequency and intensity, rising sea levels that will contribute to flooding and increased coastal erosion, less rainfall resulting in longer droughts and increased temperatures.”
It would lead Port-au-Prince into a nearly inhabitable state, as was the case for Muscat in Oman, which was depicted as a swirling hellscape of tornado warnings and temperatures “too extreme” to survive.
They said: “Muscat could see its city lacking human life with the temperature extremes simply too much for residents to withstand. Sea levels will rise decimating the downtown area and with more frequent storms urban infrastructure, population health and water resources will all be affected.”
Other cities to be affected were Jakarta in Indonesia, Delhi in India, Lima in Peru, along with staggering droughts in Lagos, Nigeria. Flooding in Manila and Shanghai in the Philippines and China was also tipped by the AI.





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