NASA, NOAA, USGS, and other U.S. government agencies project that the rise
in ocean height in the next 30 years could equal the total rise seen over the
past 100 years.
Coastal flooding will increase significantly over the next 30 years because
of sea level rise, according to a new report by an interagency sea level rise
task force that includes NASA, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA), and other federal agencies. Titled Global and Regional
Sea Level Rise Scenarios for the United States, the Feb. 15 report
concludes that sea level along U.S. coastlines will rise between 10 to 12
inches (25 to 30 centimeters) on average above today’s levels by 2050.
The report – an update to a 2017 report – forecasts sea level to the year
2150 and, for the first time, offers near-term projections for the next 30
years. Agencies at the federal, state, and local levels use these reports to
inform their plans on anticipating and coping with the effects of sea level
rise.
“This report supports previous studies and confirms what we have long
known: Sea levels are continuing to rise at an alarming rate, endangering
communities around the world. Science is indisputable and urgent action is
required to mitigate a climate crisis that is well underway,” said NASA
Administrator Bill Nelson. “NASA is steadfast in our commitment to protecting
our home planet by expanding our monitoring capabilities and continuing to
ensure our climate data is not only accessible but understandable.”
The task force developed their near-term sea level rise projections by
drawing on an improved understanding of how the processes that contribute to
rising seas – such as melting glaciers and ice sheets as well as complex interactions
between ocean, land, and ice – will affect ocean height. “That understanding
has really advanced since the 2017 report, which gave us more certainty over
how much sea level rise we’ll get in the coming decades,” said Ben Hamlington,
a research scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California
and one of the update’s lead authors.
NASA’s Sea Level Change Team, led by Hamlington, has also developed
an online mapping tool to visualize the
report’s state-of-the-art sea level rise projections on a localized level
across the U.S. “The hope is that the online tool will help make the
information as widely accessible as possible,” Hamlington said.
The Interagency Sea Level Rise Task Force projects an uptick in the
frequency and intensity of high-tide coastal flooding, otherwise known as
nuisance flooding, because of higher sea level. It also notes that if
greenhouse gas emissions continue to increase, global temperatures will become
even greater, leading to a greater likelihood that sea level rise by the end of
the century will exceed the projections in the 2022 update.
“It takes a village to make climate predictions. When you combine NASA’s
scenarios of global sea level rise with NOAA’s estimates of extreme water
levels and the U.S. Geological Survey’s impact studies, you get a robust
national estimate of the projected future that awaits American coastal
communities and our economic infrastructure in 20, 30, or 100 years from now,”
said Nadya Vinogradova Shiffer, who directs the NASA Sea Level Change Team at
NASA Headquarters in Washington.
“This is a global wake-up call and gives Americans the information needed
to act now to best position ourselves for the future,” said NOAA Administrator
Rick Spinrad, Ph.D. “As we build a Climate Ready Nation, these updated data can
inform coastal communities and others about current and future vulnerabilities
in the face of climate change and help them make smart decisions to keep people
and property safe over the long run.”
Building on a Research Legacy
The Global and Regional Sea Level Rise report incorporates sea level
projections from the latest Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)
assessment, released by the United Nations in August 2021. The IPCC reports,
issued every five to seven years, provide global evaluations of Earth’s climate
and use analyses based on computer simulations, among other data.
A separate forthcoming report known as the Fifth National Climate
Assessment, produced by the U.S. Global Change Research Program, is the latest
in a series summarizing the impacts of climate change on the U.S., and it will
in turn use the results from the Global and Regional Sea Level Rise report in
its analysis. The Climate Assessment is slated to publish in 2023.
NASA sea level researchers have years of experience studying how Earth’s changing climate will affect the ocean. Their work includes research forecasting how much coastal flooding U.S. communities will experience in 10 years, helping to visualize IPCC data on global sea level rise using an online visualization tool, and launching satellites that contribute data to a decades-long record of global sea surface height.
Learn more about sea level and climate change here: https://sealevel.nasa.gov/
Written by Jane J. Lee
Source: https://www.nasa.gov/feature/jpl/sea-level-to-rise-up-to-a-foot-by-2050-interagency-report-finds
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