Kuwait Times

No place to call home: Refugees from rising seas

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MONACO: Most refugees fleeing persecutio­n, famine or civil strife dream of one thing: going home some day. But when rising seas displace hundreds of millions of people - a near certainty, scientists say - it will be an exodus with no hope of return. “With sea level rise, we are talking about migrations without the option for a round-trip,” Francois Gemenne, an expert on the intersecti­on between geopolitic­s and the environmen­t, and director of the Hugo Observator­y in Liege, Belgium said.

The global ocean waterline has crept up 15 to 20 centimeter­s since 1900, a direct effect of climate change. Until recently, that added volume was mostly due to water expanding as it warms. Today, however, meltwater from glaciers and especially ice sheets atop Greenland and Antarctica has become the main driver. The pace of sea level rise has also picked up, increasing nearly three-fold in the last decade compared to the previous century, a landmark UN assessment of oceans and Earth’s frozen spaces to be unveiled next week will report. How high the oceans will be lifted by 2100 depends mainly on how much Earth heats up. If humanity caps global warming at two degrees Celsius above preindustr­ial levels - the cornerston­e goal of the Paris climate treaty - seas will rise by about half-ametre, according to a draft of the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report seen by AFP.

A 3C or 4C world in which efforts to curb greenhouse emissions have fallen short will likely see an increase closer to a meter, enough to wreak havoc in dozens of coastal megacities and render many island nations uninhabita­ble. “Some small islands in the Pacific and Indian Ocean are merely one to two meters above sea level,” Carlos Fuller, lead climate negotiator for the Associatio­n of Small Island States (AOSIS) said. “A 1.2 meter rise would totally submerge these states.” But even these dire impacts are a trickle compared to the torrent to come because ice sheets will continue to shed mass for hundreds of years, scientists warn. In the 22nd century, the pace of sea-level rise is likely to jump 100-fold from 3.6 millimeter­s per year today to several centimeter­s annually.

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