National Post

Wobbly moon orbit to increase flooding

- Nick Allen

A “wobble” in the moon’s orbit will cause an onslaught of coastal flooding from the mid-2030s, NASA has warned.

The global flood tally could quadruple as the gravitatio­nal effects of the lunar cycle combine with climate change to produce “a decade of dramatic increases” in disasters.

The U.S. space agency said coastal cities would experience “rapidly increasing high-tide floods” and they would occur in “clusters” which would go on for a month or longer.

It said the main cause was a “regular wobble” in the moon’s orbit, which was first recorded in 1728.

NASA said: “What’s new is how one of the wobble’s effects on the moon’s gravitatio­nal pull — the main cause of Earth’s tides — will combine with rising sea levels resulting from the planet’s warming.”

The wobble in the moon’s orbit takes 18.6 years to complete. For half of that time regular daily tides on Earth are suppressed, meaning that high tides are lower than normal, and low tides are higher than normal.

During the other half of the cycle tides are amplified, meaning that high tides get even higher and low tides get even lower.

As global sea levels rise the amplificat­ion effect will be increased even further.

The next time this “lunar assist” to high tides comes around again will be in the mid-2030s. By then, global sea level rise will have been at work for another decade.

It will have passed a “tipping point” and the result will be a “leap in flood numbers on almost all U.S. mainland coastlines,” NASA said.

Bill Nelson, who heads the space agency, said: “Lowlying areas near sea level are increasing­ly at risk and (are already) suffering due to increased flooding ... and it will only get worse. The combinatio­n of the moon’s gravitatio­nal pull, rising sea levels, and climate change will continue to exacerbate coastal flooding on our coastlines and across the world.”

He said it was crucial to plan ahead to protect businesses and people’s livelihood­s.

The study looked at “hightide floods,” also known as “nuisance floods,” which are not as devastatin­g as storm surges caused by hurricanes.

According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion the United States had around 600 of them in 2019. Coastal areas of the U.S. could see three or four times as many annually from the mid-2030s, NASA said.

The study was carried out by NASA’S sea-level change science team based at the University of Hawaii.

Assistant professor Phil Thompson, lead author of the report, said: “It’s the accumulate­d effect (of the floods) over time that will have an impact. If it floods 10 or 15 times a month, a business can’t keep operating with its parking lot under water. People lose their jobs because they can’t get to work. Seeping cesspools become a public health issue.”

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