FLORIDA HURRICANES 
1              Before Hurricane Sandy  tore  through New York and New  Jersey,  it  stopped  in Florida. Huge waves  covered beaches, swept over Fort Lauderdale's concrete sea wall and spilled onto A1A, Florida's coastal  highway.  A  month  later  another  series  of  violent  storms  hit  south  Florida,  severely  eroding  Fort  Lauderdale's beaches and a section of A1A. Workers are building a new sea wall, mending  the highway  and adding a  couple of pedestrian bridges. Beach  erosion  forced Fort  Lauderdale  to buy  sand  from an  inland mine  in central Florida;  the mine's  soft, white  sand  stands out against  the darker, grittier native  variety. 
2             Hurricanes and storms are nothing new for Florida. But as the oceans warm, hurricanes are growing  more  intense. To make matters worse,  this  is happening against a backdrop of sharply  rising sea  levels,  turning what has been a seasonal annoyance into an existential threat. 
3             For around 2,000 years  sea  levels  remained  relatively constant. Between 1880 and 2011, however,  they  rose  by  an  average  of  0.07  inches  (1.8mm)  a  year,  and  between  1993  and  2011  the  average was  between  0.11  and  0.13  inches  a  year.  In  2007  the  Intergovernmental  Panel  on  Climate  Change  (IPCC)  forecast  that  seas  could  rise by as much as 23  inches by 2100,  though  since  then many  scientists have  called  that  forecast conservative. Seas are also expected  to warm up, which may make hurricanes and  tropical storms more intense. 
4             Even as seas have risen over the past century, Americans have rushed to build homes near the beach.  Storms that  lash the modern American coastline cause more economic damage than their predecessors  because  there  is more  to  destroy.  The Great Miami Hurricane  of  1926,  a  Category  4  storm,  caused  $1  billion-worth of damage in current dollars. Were it to strike today the insured losses would be $125 billion,  reckons  Air Worldwide,  a  catastrophe-modelling  firm.  In  1992  Hurricane  Andrew,  a  Category  5  storm,  caused $23 billion in damage; today it would be twice that
5             Most Floridians  live  in  coastal  counties. Buildings  cluster on  low ground; more people  than  in any  other  state  live  on  land  less  than  four  feet  (1.2  metres)  above  the  high-tide  line.  Florida's  limestone  bedrock makes it easy for salt water from surging seas to contaminate its freshwater aquifers. And it relies  heavily on canals for flood control, which a sea-level rise of just six inches would devastate.   
                                                                                              Adapted from The Economist, June 15th , 2013 
With respect to hurricanes in Florida, which of the following statements is most supported by the information in the article?