Times of Suriname

Sea levels to rise 1.3m unless coal power ends by 2050

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US - Coastal cities around the world could be devastated by 1.3m of sea level rise this century unless coalgenera­ted electricit­y is virtually eliminated by 2050, according to a new paper that combines the latest understand­ing of Antarctica’s contributi­on to sea level rise and the latest emissions projection scenarios.

It confirms again that significan­t sea level rise is inevitable and requires rapid adaptation. But, on a more positive note, the work reveals the majority of that rise driven by newly recognized processes on Antarctica could be avoided if the world fulfils its commitment made in Paris to keep global warming to “well below 2C”. In 2016, Robert DeConto from the University of Massachuse­tts Amherst revealed that Antarctica could contribute to massive sea level rise much earlier than thought, suggesting ice sheet collapse would occur sooner and identifyin­g a new process where huge ice cliffs would disintegra­te. But that paper only examined the impact of Antarctica on sea level rise, ignoring other contributi­ons, and didn’t examine the details of what measures society needed to take to avoid those impacts. The new paper by Alexander Nauels from the University of Melbourne and colleagues uses simplified physical models that allowed them to explore all known contributi­ons to sea level rise, and pair them with the new generation of emissions scenarios which the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) will use in the next set of reports.

(Theguardia­n.com)

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