BSS
  12 Oct 2021, 17:07

When global warming stops, seas will still rise

   PARIS, Oct 12, 2021 (BSS/AFP) - Even if humanity beats the odds and caps 
global warming at 1.5 degrees Celsius above preindustrial levels, seas will 
rise for centuries to come and swamp cities currently home to half-a-billion 
people, researchers warned Tuesday.

  In a world that heats up another half-degree above that benchmark, an 
additional 200 million of today's urban dwellers would regularly find 
themselves knee-deep in sea water and more vulnerable to devastating storm 
surges, they reported in Environmental Research Letters.

  Worst hit in any scenario will be Asia, which accounts for nine of the ten 
mega-cities at highest risk. 

  Land home to more than half the populations of Bangladesh and Vietnam fall 
below the long-term high tide line, even in a 2C world.

  Built-up areas in China, India and Indonesia would also face devastation.

  Most projections for sea level rise and the threat it poses to shoreline 
cities run to the end of the century and range from half-a-metre to less than 
twice that, depending how quickly carbon pollution is reduced. 

  But oceans will continue to swell for hundreds of years beyond 2100 -- fed 
by melting ice sheets, heat trapped in the ocean and the dynamics of warming 
water -- no matter how aggressively greenhouse gas emissions are drawn down, 
the findings show.

  - Not 'if' but 'when' -

  "Roughly five percent of the world's population today live on land below 
where the high tide level is expected to rise based on carbon dioxide that 
human activity has already added to the atmosphere," lead author Ben Strauss, 
CEO and chief scientist of Climate Central, told AFP.

  Today's concentration of CO2 -- which lingers for hundreds of years -- is 
50 percent higher than in 1800, and Earth's average surface temperature has 
already risen 1.1C.

  That's enough to eventually push up sea levels nearly two metres (more than 
six feet), whether it takes two centuries or 10, Strauss said.

  The 1.5-C warming limit enshrined in the Paris Agreement that nations will 
try to keep in play at the COP26 climate summit in Glasgow next month 
translates into nearly three metres over the long haul.

  Unless engineers figure out how to quickly remove massive amounts of CO2 
from the atmosphere, that amount of sea level rise is not a matter of "if" 
but "when", according to the study. 

  These are the optimistic scenarios.

  "The headline finding for me is the stark difference between a 1.5C world 
after sharp pollution cuts versus a world after 3C or 4C of warming," Strauss 
said.

  "At Glasgow and for the rest of this decade, we have the chance to help or 
to betray a hundred generations to come."

  - Buying time -

  National carbon-cutting pledges under the 2015 Paris treaty would, if 
honoured, still see Earth warm 2.7C by 2100. If efforts to reign in 
greenhouse gases falter, temperatures could rise 4C or more above mid-19th 
century levels.

  This much warming would add six to nine metres to global oceans over the 
long haul, and force cities currently home to nearly a billion people to 
either mount massive defences against future sea level rise or rebuild on 
higher ground. 

  In China alone, land occupied today by 200 million people would fall below 
high tide in a 3-C scenario. And the threat is not only long-term: absent 
massive sea walls, Chinese cityscapes home to tens of millions could become 
unliveable within 80 years.

  "1.5C of warming will still lead to devastating sea level rise, but the 
hotter alternatives are far worse," said Strauss.

  "We're in bad shape but it is never too late to do better, and the 
difference we could make is enormous."

  At higher levels of warming, the danger increases substantially of 
triggering the irreversible disintegration of ice sheets or the release of 
natural stores of CO2 and methane in permafrost, scientists warn.

  Capping global warming as low as possible also buys us time to adapt.

  "It is almost certain that seas will rise more slowly in a 1.5C or 2C 
warmer world," Strauss said.

  Researchers from Princeton University and the Potsdam Institute for Climate 
Impact Research in Germany contributed to the study.