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<br />16 <br />Figure 10. List of Assets Exposed to Sea Level Rise <br /> <br />Notes: See Figure 4 for an explanation of the asset impact ranking. The asset counts for increasing levels of sea <br />level rise are cumulative. Source of asset count: Local asset data provided by San Leandro City staff, OpenStreet <br />Maps, Open Data, FEMA,23 and Alameda County Flood Control and Water Conservation District and BCDC 24 as <br />represented on Vizonomy. <br /> <br />Temperature Changes and Precipitation Events <br />Climate Change may increase temperatures in San Leandro, but impacts on rainfall are unclear <br />As greenhouse gas emissions increase, temperatures are expected to warm globally. San Leandro’s <br />climate is no exception and temperatures are projected to increase throughout the city with the number <br />of days over 90 ◦F increasing from a model history baseline average25 of less than once a year to 11 days <br />per year by the end of century26. The impact of climate change on precipitation is more ambiguous, and <br /> <br />23 FEMA Flood Insurance Rate Map. 2009. 100 and 500-Year Floodplain. Alameda County. <br />24 Alameda County Flood Control and Water Conservation District and BCDC. (2015). Adapting to Rising Tides: Alameda County <br />Shoreline Vulnerability Assessment Final Report. <br />25 The climate model history is intended to capture climate conditions experienced from 1970-2000, but not to predict the <br />weather conditions on any given day, month, or year. For this baseline period, the climate models were run with an emissions <br />scenario representative of the observed history from those past years but with the same physics and configurations as in <br />future-year runs. This enables comparison of like historical and future model data to better establish the magnitude of likely <br />future changes. This climate modeled history is referred to here as the historical baseline. <br />26 Reclamation. (2013). 'Downscaled CMIP3 and CMIP5 Climate and Hydrology Projections: Release of Downscaled CMIP5 <br />Climate Projections, Comparison with preceding Information, and Summary of User Needs', prepared by the U.S. Department of <br />the Interior, Bureau of Reclamation, Technical Services Center, Denver, Colorado. <br />60