Pacific Island nations such as Kiribati — a low-lying
country in the southern Pacific Ocean — are preparing now for a future of
higher sea levels.
NASA Earth Observatory
Climate change is rapidly reshaping a region of the world that’s home to
millions of people.
In the next 30 years, Pacific
Island nations such as Tuvalu, Kiribati, and Fiji will experience at least 8
inches (15 centimeters) of sea level rise, according to an analysis by NASA’s
sea level change science team. This amount of rise will occur regardless of
whether greenhouse gas emissions change in the coming years.
The sea level change team undertook
the analysis of this region at the request of several Pacific Island nations,
including Tuvalu and Kiribati, and in close coordination with the U.S.
Department of State.
In addition to the overall
analysis, the agency’s sea level team produced high-resolution maps showing which areas of different Pacific Island nations will be
vulnerable to high-tide flooding — otherwise known as nuisance flooding or sunny day flooding — by the
2050s. Released on Sept. 23, the maps outline flooding potential in a range of
emissions scenarios, from best-case to business-as-usual to worst-case.
“Sea level will continue to rise
for centuries, causing more frequent flooding,” said Nadya Vinogradova Shiffer,
who directs ocean physics programs for NASA’s Earth Science Division. “NASA’s
new flood tool tells you what the potential increase in flooding frequency and
severity look like in the next decades for the coastal communities of the
Pacific Island nations.”
Team members, led by researchers at
the University of Hawaii and in collaboration with scientists at the University
of Colorado and Virginia Tech, started with flood maps of Kiribati, Tuvalu,
Fiji, Nauru, and Niue. They plan to build high-resolution maps for other
Pacific Island nations in the near future. The maps can assist Pacific Island
nations in deciding where to focus mitigation efforts.
“Science and data can help the
community of Tuvalu in relaying accurate sea level rise projections,” said
Grace Malie, a youth leader from Tuvalu who is involved with the Rising Nations
Initiative, a United Nations-supported program led by Pacific Island nations to
help preserve their statehood and protect the rights and heritage of
populations affected by climate change. “This will also help with early warning
systems, which is something that our country is focusing on at the moment.”
Future
Flooding
The analysis by the sea level change team also found that the number of high-tide flooding
days in an average year will increase by an order of magnitude for nearly all
Pacific Island nations by the 2050s. Portions of the NASA team’s analysis were
included in a sea level rise report published by the United Nations in August 2024.
Areas of Tuvalu that currently see
less than five high-tide flood days a year could average 25 flood days annually
by the 2050s. Regions of Kiribati that see fewer than five flood days a year
today will experience an average of 65 flood days annually by the 2050s.
“I am living the reality of climate
change,” said Malie. “Everyone (in Tuvalu) lives by the coast or along the
coastline, so everyone gets heavily affected by this.”
Flooding on island nations can come
from the ocean inundating land during storms or during exceptionally high
tides, called king tides. But it can also result when saltwater intrudes into
underground areas and pushes the water table to the surface. “There are points
on the island where we will see seawater bubbling from beneath the surface and
heavily flooding the area,” Malie added.
Matter of
Location
Sea level rise doesn’t occur
uniformly around the world. A combination of global and local conditions, such
as the topography of a coastline and how glacial meltwater is distributed in
the ocean, affects the amount of rise a particular region will experience.
“We’re always focused on the
differences in sea level rise from one region to another, but in the Pacific,
the numbers are surprisingly consistent,” said Ben Hamlington, a sea level
researcher at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California and the
agency’s sea level change science team lead.
The impacts of 8 inches (15
centimeters) of sea level rise will vary from country to country. For instance,
some nations could experience nuisance flooding several times a year at their
airport, while others might face frequent neighborhood flooding equivalent to
being inundated for nearly half the year.
Researchers would like to combine satellite data on ocean levels with ground-based measurements of sea levels at
specific points, as well as with better land elevation information. “But
there’s a real lack of on-the-ground data in these countries,” said Hamlington.
The combination of space-based and ground-based measurements can yield more
precise sea level rise projections and improved understanding of the impacts to
countries in the Pacific.
“The future of the young people of
Tuvalu is already at stake,” said Malie. “Climate change is more than an
environmental crisis. It is about justice, survival for nations like Tuvalu,
and global responsibility.”
To explore the high-tide flooding maps for Pacific Island nations, go to: https://sealevel.nasa.gov
By: Jet Propulsion
Laboratory
Source: NASA Analysis Shows Irreversible Sea Level Rise for Pacific Islands - NASA
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