New study backs UN panel on ocean rise
The UN's climate panel has been backed over a key question as to how far
global warming will drive up sea levels this century, a study published on
Sunday says. In a landmark report in 2007, the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change (IPCC) predicted oceans would rise by 18-59 centimetres (7.2 and 23.6
inches) by 2100. The study appears in the journal Nature Geoscience. "Given that the two approaches are entirely independent of each other, this result strengthens the confidence with which one may interpret the IPCC results," said Siddall. But, he said, no-one should be kidded into thinking the flooding threat was over. "The fact that this number is smaller than other numbers does not mean that this is not potentially a massive and very important sea level rise," Siddall told AFP in a telephone interview. "Fifty centimetres (20 inches) of rise would be very, very dangerous for Bangladesh, it would be very dangerous for all low-lying areas. And not only that, the 50 centimetres (20 inches) is the global mean. Locally, it could be as high as a metre (3.25 feet), perhaps even higher, because water is pushed into different places by the effect of gravity." He added: "Extreme flood effects will definitely become more frequent. If you rise by 50 centimetres (20 inches), floods that once happened every 100 years then become once a decade." Siddall also pointed out that sea levels would inevitably rise even higher after the 21st century because of inertial effect. It takes decades for atmospheric warming to translate into a warming of the seas because of the vast volume of the ocean, he said. Thus the 22nd century and beyond will feel the impacts of the warming of the 21st century. The IPCC's estimates on sea levels have been repeatedly challenged since the Fourth Assessment Report was published in 2007. Several studies have suggested that runoff from the Greenland and Antarctic icesheets -- which hold the world's biggest stores of freshwater -- will be much higher than the panel suspected. One paper, published in April by Paul Blanchon, a geoscientist at Mexico's National University, said that, in the distant past, the seas suddenly rose by three metres (10 feet) within a very time. There was "a distinct possibility" that a step change of this kind could happen within the next 100 years, said Blanchon. Copyright © 2009 AFP. All rights reserved |