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Sea rise to continue for centuries
Part of: Prelims and GS-III – Economy; Environment
Context The researchers have warned that even if humanity caps global warming at 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels, seas will rise for centuries to come and swamp cities currently home to half-a-billion people.
Key takeaways
- If temperature rises another half-degree above that benchmark, an additional 200 million of today’s urban dwellers would regularly find themselves knee-deep in sea water and more vulnerable to devastating storm surges.
- Worst hit in any scenario will be Asia, which accounts for nine of the 10 mega-cities at highest risk.
- Land home to more than half the populations of Bangladesh and Vietnam fall below the long-term high tide line.
- Built-up areas in China, India and Indonesia would also face devastation.
- Most projections for sea level rise run to the end of the century. But oceans will continue to swell for hundreds of years beyond 2100 — fed by melting ice sheets, heat trapped in the ocean and the dynamics of warming water — no matter how aggressively greenhouse gas emissions are drawn down.
Do you know?
- Sea Level rise (SLR) takes place by three primary factors:
- Thermal Expansion
- Melting Glaciers
- Loss of Greenland and Antarctica’s ice sheets.
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