Otago Daily Times

Data shows rate of sealevel rise increasing

- HAMISH MACLEAN hamish.maclean@odt.co.nz

SEALEVEL rise in Dunedin has more than doubled during the past six decades, Stats NZ data shows.

Stats NZ environmen­tal and agricultur­al statistics senior manager Michele Lloyd said the recently updated statistica­l environmen­tal indicator, ‘‘coastal sealevel rise’’, showed that at New Zealand’s four main sites with records dating back more than 120 years sea levels rose more quickly over the past 60 years than the previous 60 years.

The rate of sealevel rise had doubled in the 60 years to 2020 at three out of the four sites — Wellington, Lyttelton and Dunedin — compared with the mean rate from 1901 through to 1960, she said.

‘‘Future climate change projection­s indicate that sea levels will continue to rise,’’ she said.

‘‘Rising sea levels affect coastal communitie­s, infrastruc­ture, coastal habitats, and biodiversi­ty.’’

Wellington (1891) holds the longest records of sealevel rise, followed by Auckland and Dunedin (1899), and then Lyttelton (1901).

New Plymouth (1920) and Mount Maunganui (1951) also have longterm records incorporat­ed into the Stats NZ analysis.

Based on available data to 2020, annual mean coastal sea levels rose relative to land at all six monitoring sites around New Zealand, the government department said.

Among the four main sites, Lyttelton showed the highest 120year trend in relative mean sealevel rise (which included vertical land movement) at 2.24mm/year.

Dunedin, at 1.52mm/year, recorded the lowest rise over the past 120 years among the four main sites, the data shows.

However, the rate at which the sea level is rising in Dunedin is itself on the rise: from 1901 to 1960, sealevel rise along the city’s coast was 0.69mm/year, but then in the 1961–2020 period, it more than doubled, increasing to a 1.76mm/year rise.

The relative sealevel rise included local or regional changes in vertical land movement including uplift or sinking, Stats NZ said.

This could be caused by geological processes such as tectonic and volcanic activity, or human activity, which could cause land subsidence.

Neverthele­ss, climate change was one of the main factors, Stats NZ said.

When carbon emissions warmed the Earth’s atmosphere, heat was absorbed by the ocean and the warming caused the sea water to expand.

Additional­ly, melting ice in or around sea water added to the total volume of water, further contributi­ng to sealevel rise.

 ?? PHOTO: PETER MCINTOSH/ODT GRAPHIC ?? Here come the waves . . . High tides at St Clair attract visitors but could also signal rising sea levels.
PHOTO: PETER MCINTOSH/ODT GRAPHIC Here come the waves . . . High tides at St Clair attract visitors but could also signal rising sea levels.

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