Coastal sea level rise with warming above 2 °C

Journal Article (2016)
Author(s)

Svetlana Jevrejeva (National Oceanography Centre)

Luke Jackson (University of Oxford, National Oceanography Centre)

Riccardo Riva (TU Delft - Physical and Space Geodesy)

Aslak Grinsted (University of Copenhagen)

John Moore (Beijing Normal University, University of Lapland)

Research Group
Physical and Space Geodesy
URL related publication
http://10.1073/pnas.1605312113 Final published version
More Info
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Publication Year
2016
Language
English
Research Group
Physical and Space Geodesy
Journal title
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Issue number
47
Volume number
113
Pages (from-to)
13342-13347
Downloads counter
166

Abstract

Two degrees of global warming above the preindustrial level is widely suggested as an appropriate threshold beyond which climate change risks become unacceptably high. This “2 °C” threshold is likely to be reached between 2040 and 2050 for both Representative Concentration Pathway (RCP) 8.5 and 4.5. Resulting sea level rises will not be globally uniform, due to ocean dynamical processes and changes in gravity associated with water mass redistribution. Here we provide probabilistic sea level rise projections for the global coastline with warming above the 2 °C goal. By 2040, with a 2 °C warming under the RCP8.5 scenario, more than 90%of coastal areas will experience sea level rise exceeding the global estimate of 0.2 m, with up to 0.4 m expected along the Atlantic coast of North America and Norway. With a 5 °C rise by 2100, sea level will rise rapidly, reaching 0.9 m (median), and 80% of the coastline will exceed the global sea level rise at the 95th percentile upper limit of 1.8 m. Under RCP8.5, by 2100, New York may expect rises of 1.09 m, Guangzhou may expect rises of 0.91 m, and Lagos may expect rises of 0.90 m, with the 95th percentile upper limit of 2.24 m, 1.93 m, and 1.92 m, respectively. The coastal communities of rapidly expanding cities in the developing world, and vulnerable tropical coastal ecosystems, will have a very limited time after midcentury to adapt to sea level rises unprecedented since the dawn of the Bronze Age.