IPCC Report: Sea Level Rise Is a Present and Future Danger (2024)

IPCC Report: Sea Level Rise Is a Present and Future Danger (1)

Rob Moore Director, Flooding Solutions, Environmental Health

The latest report from the United Nation’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) paints a very sobering picture of the challenges we face due to sea level rise. The Special Report on the Ocean and Cryosphere in a Changing Climate (SROCC) finds that global mean sea levels will most likely rise between 0.95 feet (0.29m) and 3.61 feet (1.1m) by the end of this century. These are the most dire sea level rise projections ever made by the IPCC.

As alarming as it is to think about sea levels that could be 3.61 feet (1.1m) higher by the end of this century, the IPCC projections are still somewhat conservative and do not include the full range of scenarios scientists think are possible.

Dr. Michael Oppenheimer, a lead author of the SROCC chapter on sea level rise, said in a recent article he co-authored for Scientific American that “climate skeptics and deniers have often accused scientists of exaggerating the threat of climate change, but the evidence shows that not only have they not exaggerated, they have underestimated.” That could very well be true of the SROCC and previous IPCC sea level rise projections.

Sea levels will rise under all emissions scenarios for centuries to come and accelerate in the second half of this century. Sea levels have already risen about a foot in the past several decades and communities all along the East and Gulf coasts of the U.S. are already experiencing chronic tidal flooding. Coastal communities are facing the threat of direct inundation as well as greatly magnified risks from storm surge, tidal flooding, extreme rain, and other effects of climate change.

NRDC has been working on a suite of solutions that can help the nation better prepare for and adapt to the reality of sea level rise.

  • Climate smart reforms to the National Flood Insurance Program that include helping people move to higher ground, increased transparency and disclosure of flood risks, and producing flood maps that reflect future conditions and climate change.
  • Making voluntary buyouts of flooded homes easier for people to secure, which allows them to move somewhere safer. This assistance needs to be made more widely available, more equitable, and more timely.
  • Pushing for federal flood protection standards to ensure that public buildings and infrastructure are built with an additional margin of safety for flooding and consideration of future sea level rise.

These are hardly the only solutions communities, states, and the federal government need to pursue and only focus on the built environment. Sea level rise is a complex issue with multidimensional impacts. The projections themselves depend on a huge number of factors. The number of people who will be affected in the future depends on development decisions we cannot reliably forecast. The potential strategies for addressing these challenges are similarly complex and multidimensional.

What the IPCC projections do (and don’t) tell us about sea level rise

It’s important to realize that the IPCC SROCC projections reflect the scenarios that are most likely; not the full range of scenarios scientists think are possible.

The SROCC’s projections don’t fully account for the possibility of rapid changes in polar regions. But it’s become apparent that much higher levels of sea level rise are plausible because Greenland is melting much faster and there is increased instability in the West Antarctic. Both of these were once thought to be future worries, but that’s no longer an assumption we should rely upon.

These scenarios were better reflected in 2017 sea level rise projections made by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), which informed the United States’ own National Climate Assessment. NOAA estimates that sea levels would likely rise between 1 foot (0.3m) and 4.27 feet (1.3m); higher than the IPCC’s SROCC projections. The National Climate Assessment pointed out that, “These ranges do not, however, capture the full range of physically plausible global average sea level rise over the 21st century,” and that sea levels could rise as much as 8.2 feet (2.5m) by the end of the century if rapid loss of Antarctic ice occurred.

IPCC Report: Sea Level Rise Is a Present and Future Danger (3)

A recent paper in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (co-authored by Dr. Oppenheimer, who is a lead author on the SROCC) recognized that sea level rise in excess of 6.56 feet (2.0m) is possible even if we successfully limit warming to only 2°C by the end of this century. While such an outcome is considered extremely unlikely, it wasn’t long ago that such an outcome was considered so implausible as to be beyond consideration.

Depending on where you are, sea levels could rise much higher

Sea level rise projections are given in terms of “global mean sea level” rise, or GMSL. This is the amount of sea level rise averaged over every point on the planet’s oceans. But sea levels at any given point vary depending on ocean currents and several other factors, including the gravitational pull of the ice in Greenland and Antarctica (or the lack thereof, if it’s melting). The amount of sea level rise in a specific location could vary about 30 percent from the global mean.

For the United States, NOAA projects that sea levels along the East Coast could be 0.4m–0.7m higher than GMSL, 0.2m–1.0m higher along the Gulf Coast, 0.2–0.3m higher along the West Coast, 0.3m–0.5m higher in Hawaii and Pacific Islands, and as much as 1.0m lower in Alaska.

Direct inundation is just part of the problem

When sea levels rise, it’s not just those below the new high tide line that have to worry. Rising seas means higher potential for flood events of all kinds. Tidal flooding, storm surge, and other forms of flooding in low-lying coastal areas become even more likely; what the IPCC calls “extreme sea level” events. In fact, the SROCC finds that, “In the absence of adaptation, more intense and frequent extreme sea level events, together with trends in coastal development will increase expected annual flood damages by 2-3 orders of magnitude by 2100.”

Flooding is just one of the challenges the world is already facing and that more areas will face in the future as sea levels rise.

Erosion of beaches and coastal lands, salinization of soils and farmlands , and saltwater intrusion into aquifers used for drinking water are all problems we’re starting to see and will grow in the future. Natural systems may not be able to keep up with the rapid rates of sea level rise now being projected. The salinity of freshwater rivers and wetlands may increase. Tidal wetlands and mangroves, which have some ability to migrate in response to rising seas, may find they have nowhere to migrate to because of human development that hems them in.

If sea level rise cannot be stopped, what can be done about it?

Sea level rise is not a reversible effect of climate change. Sea level rise does not stop in the year 2100. It’s just that we usually only talk about the projections out to that time frame. The SROCC makes it clear that, even under the most optimistic emissions reduction scenarios, the world will experience rising sea levels for several centuries to come. Coastal areas and island nations will have to consider a wide range of adaptation strategies, including migration or managed retreat.

The SROCC lays out the main strategies that are available to communities and nations.

IPCC Report: Sea Level Rise Is a Present and Future Danger (4)

All of these climate adaptation strategies suffer from one current flaw: We typically don’t take action on them until after a major coastal disaster has already happened.

The strategies of Protect, Accommodate, and Advance have some serious limitations, especially as sea levels approach or exceed those upper limits in the SROCC. First, these strategies are not very flexible—they hinge on correctly guessing how much the risk of flooding will increase. Structural approaches like seawalls and levees not only cost a lot to build, but can cost even more to maintain and operate. These solutions also tend to be one-dimensional, protecting against a single mode of vulnerability. A seawall may be effective against storm surge or direct inundation, but if groundwater rises behind that barrier or rainfall collects there, flooding will still occur.

On the other hand, Retreat and Ecosystem-based Adaptation have some distinct advantages. Managed retreat is the only strategy that permanently eliminates the potential for future damages. It also affords the opportunity to also address legacy problems like social inequity and access to modern infrastructure and services. Retreat doesn’t just mean moving away from vulnerable coastlines. It can also mean moving towards a better place than the one people are leaving behind.

Ideally, these two strategies are best implemented together, in a complementary fashion. As we help people relocate to higher ground and un-build previously developed areas, we will create new land that can then be used for ecosystem-based strategies. This not only can address vulnerabilities to sea level rise, but also create new habitat for wildlife, improve local water quality, or enhance groundwater recharge. And communities can rethink where people live, where economic development should take place, and how roads, water, sewers, and other infrastructure can be improved and redesigned for the future.

There are certainly drawbacks to Retreat and Ecosystem-based Adaptation, starting with being the two strategies we have the least experience with, especially at the scale that sea level rise will require. They also raise the same questions common to all adaptation strategies with regards to who pays and who benefits, as well as who is and isn’t going to get government assistance to relocate.

All of these strategies (Protect, Accommodate, Advance, Retreat, and Ecosystem-based strategies…as well as doing nothing at all) will be employed as communities, states, and the federal government come to grips with the reality of sea level rise. What we need to do is start implementing them. Preferably well in advance of major coastal disasters occurring.

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IPCC Report: Sea Level Rise Is a Present and Future Danger (2024)

FAQs

IPCC Report: Sea Level Rise Is a Present and Future Danger? ›

The Special Report on the Ocean and Cryosphere in a Changing Climate (SROCC) finds that global mean sea levels will most likely rise between 0.95 feet (0.29m) and 3.61 feet (1.1m) by the end of this century. These are the most dire sea level rise projections ever made by the IPCC.

Is rising sea levels a real threat for the future? ›

Rather, they are rising, and at the current rate, sea levels will be 1 to 1.6 metres higher by 2100. This means that, in less than 80 years, 250 to 400 million people will likely need new homes in new locations.

What does the IPCC 5th Assessment Report say about sea level rise by 2100? ›

IPCC AR5 and SROCC projected a likely upper limit of GMSL rise of 0.98 and 1.10 m, respectively, for RCP 8.5 by 2100; there is a corresponding 17% probability that GMSL rise will exceed this estimate4.

What is the IPCC prediction for sea level rise 2100? ›

Sea level could reach around 60-110 cm by 2100 if no efforts are made. Even if greenhouse gas emissions are reduced and global warming is limited (below 2°C), water level will still rise 30 to 60 cm by the end of the century.

What is the warning of the IPCC? ›

According to the IPCC report, limiting global warming to 1.5°C requires a peak before 2025, reduce emissions by 43% by 2030, 60% by 2035 and reach net-zero in early 2050.

How much has the sea risen in the last 100 years? ›

Over the past 100 years, global temperatures have risen about 1 degree C (1.8 degrees F), with sea level response to that warming totaling about 160 to 210 mm (with about half of that amount occurring since 1993), or about 6 to 8 inches.

How much would oceans rise if all ice melted? ›

There is still some uncertainty about the full volume of glaciers and ice caps on Earth, but if all of them were to melt, global sea level would rise approximately 70 meters (approximately 230 feet), flooding every coastal city on the planet. Learn more: USGS Water Science School: Glaciers and Icecaps.

Can we reverse sea level rise? ›

Sea level rise is not a reversible effect of climate change. Sea level rise does not stop in the year 2100. It's just that we usually only talk about the projections out to that time frame.

What is the predicted sea level rise by 2050? ›

Sea level along the U.S. coastline is projected to rise, on average, 10 - 12 inches (0.25 - 0.30 meters) in the next 30 years (2020 - 2050), which will be as much as the rise measured over the last 100 years (1920 - 2020).

Should we worry about rising sea levels? ›

Rising seas make hurricanes and other storms more dangerous through higher storm surges and flooding. As higher seas and related flooding erode and inundate islands and coastlines worldwide, infrastructure and livelihoods will be lost, and vast swaths of land will become uninhabitable.

Can rising sea levels be stopped? ›

If the commitments for cutting carbon emissions in the Paris Agreement are met, catastrophic sea level rise can be kept at bay with a global mean rise of 50cm. But if emissions continue at their current rate, one metre of sea level rise is possible by 2100 and up to four metres by 2300.

What areas in the United States would begin to flood due to a rising sea level? ›

Large cities surrounded by water -- such as Boston, New Orleans and San Francisco -- will be among the regions that could experience flooding in the near future due to land elevation changes combined with sea level rise -- about 4 millimeters per year, said Ohenhen, who authored the paper.

What is causing the sea level to rise in the IPCC? ›

Sea level is projected to rise at an even greater rate in this century. The two major causes of global sea level rise are thermal expansion of the oceans (water expands as it warms) and the loss of land-based ice due to increased melting.

Can we trust the IPCC? ›

It is important to appreciate the degree to which the IPCC has received a free ride in the media. To hear most journalists tell it, this organisation is a paragon of scientific truth and respectability. Words such as 'authoritative,' 'pre-eminent,' and 'gold standard' are typically used to describe it.

Is the IPCC report credible? ›

The approval process of the IPCC's synthesis report is a critical component of the organization's scientific assessments, and helps to ensure that the report reflects the best available scientific evidence and is a trusted and credible source of information for taking climate action for all.

Who funds the IPCC? ›

The IPCC is funded by regular contributions from its parent organizations WMO and UNEP, and voluntary contributions from its member governments and the UNFCCC.

Should we be worried about rising sea levels? ›

Rising seas make hurricanes and other storms more dangerous through higher storm surges and flooding. As higher seas and related flooding erode and inundate islands and coastlines worldwide, infrastructure and livelihoods will be lost, and vast swaths of land will become uninhabitable.

What will happen to rising sea levels in the future? ›

The Next 30 Years of Sea Level Rise

Sea level along the U.S. coastline is projected to rise, on average, 10 - 12 inches (0.25 - 0.30 meters) in the next 30 years (2020 - 2050), which will be as much as the rise measured over the last 100 years (1920 - 2020).

What will happen to sea levels by 2050? ›

These scientists project that global mean sea levels will rise almost 1 foot (0.28 meter) above 2000 levels by 2050—and above 3 feet (1 meter) by 2100. This is our “intermediate” scenario.

What will happen if sea levels rise too much? ›

Higher sea levels are coinciding with more dangerous hurricanes and typhoons that move more slowly and drop more rain, contributing to more powerful storm surges that can strip away everything in their path.

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