President Donald Trump announced Thursday that the United States will withdraw from the Paris climate accord — a 2015 agreement among nearly 200 nations to reduce greenhouse gas emissions to combat climate change.

Few parts of the United States are as vulnerable to rising sea levels as South Florida. And while the causes of climate change — and how it might be affecting sea levels — continue to be a political flashpoint nationally, it’s been hard for this part of the country to ignore the effects.

Based on the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration’s most recent projections, worst-case estimates call for a 2-foot sea level rise by 2060 and more than 6 feet by 2100.

Those dire predictions have moved beyond theoretical in recent years as tidewaters have been rising higher and into more neighborhoods from the Keys to Palm Beach County. But it’s not just here: NOAA’s predictions show many low-level portions of the country under water.

Use the nation-wide map to explore NOAA’s projections for sea level rises at 2 and 6 feet, or search by any address.