The Asian Age

Sea- level rise may up risk of tsunamis worldwide

■ Deadly tsunami caused a nuclear plant to melt down

- THE ASIAN AGE

Washington, Aug. 19: Even minor rise in sea levels due to climate change can increase the risk of potentiall­y devastatin­g tsunamis around the world, a study has warned.

The threat of rising sea levels to coastal cities and communitie­s throughout the world is well known, but new findings show the likely increase of flooding farther inland from tsunamis following earthquake­s.

For example, the tsunami that devasted a portion of northern Japan after the 2011 Tohoku- Oki earthquake also caused a nuclear plant to melt down and spread radioactiv­e contaminat­ion.

“Our research shows that sea- level rise can significan­tly increase the tsunami hazard, which means that smaller tsunamis in the future can have the same adverse impacts as big tsunamis would today,” said Robert Weiss, an associate professor at Virginia Tech in the US.

For the study published in the journal Science Advances, researcher­s created computer- simulated tsunamis at current sea level and with sealevel increases of 1.5 feet and 3 feet in the Chinese territory of Macau.

Macau is a densely populated coastal region located in South China.

At current sea level, an earthquake would need to tip past a magnitude of 8.8 to cause widespread tsunami inundation in Macau. But with the simulated sea- level rises, the results surprised the team.

The sea- level rise dramatical­ly increased the frequency of tsunami-induced flooding by 1.2 to 2.4 times for the 1.5- foot increase and from 1.5 to 4.7 times for the three- foot increase.

“We found that the increased inundation frequency was contribute­d by earthquake­s of smaller magnitudes, which posed no threat at current sea level, but could cause significan­t inundation at higher sea- level conditions,” said Lin Lin Li, a senior research fellow at the Earth Observator­y of Singapore.

“We produced a series of tsunami inundation maps for Macau using more than 5,000 tsunami simulation­s generated from synthetic earthquake­s prepared for the Manila Trench,” said Adam Switzer, an associate professor at Earth Observator­y of Singapore.

It is estimated that sea levels in the Macau region will rise by 1.5 feet by 2060 and 3 feet by 2100. The hazard of large tsunamis in the South China Sea region comes from the Manila Trench.

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