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Parts of provinces of Buenos Aires and Entre Ríos will be underwater by century’s end, warns report

Sea levels are rising and Argentina will not be the only Latin American country to suffer the consequenc­es.

- BY DARÍO SILVA D’ANDREA

According to scientific research projection­s, much of the provinces of Buenos Aires and Entre Ríos, along with numerous regions in Latin America, will be below sea level by the year 2100 as a result of climate change.

“Global warming has raised the level of the sea by around 20 centimetre­s since 1880 and the rate of increase is accelerati­ng. The rising sea level drasticall­y increases the probabilit­ies of damaging floods from tidal waves,” warns new research from a non-profit research and journalism organisati­on specialise­d in energy and climate change.

According to the new report from Climate Central, various parts of Entre Ríos between the Uruguay and Paraná Rivers and of Buenos Aires Province around Samborombó­n bay will remain underwater within 80 years.

The projection­s indicate that with a rise in global temperatur­e of 0.5 degrees Celsius, the waters could rise around 70 centimetre­s in the central zone of Buenos Aires Province and the Paraná Delta while with an increase of one degree, the level of water would rise by over two metres (See the interactiv­e map from Climate Central for more).

With a global temperatur­e increase of two degrees, the waters would cover the territorie­s of Buenos Aires and Entre Ríos up to almost five metres above current sea level and over six metres with an increase of three degrees Celsius, while with four degrees the situation would be catastroph­ic with almost nine metres above current sea level, according to the projection­s of the United States-based NGO’S analysis and report on climatolog­y.

The projection­s show that rising sea levels would flood the coastal zones of the City of Buenos Aires, Southern Greater Buenos Aires, La Plata and places like Campana and Zárate. Along the Buenos Aires Province coast the worst scenario would be all the cities disappeari­ng down to Mar del Plata.

TEMPERATUR­ES SOAR

The Paris Agreement of 2015 stipulates that this century’s temperatur­e increase be kept as close as possible to 1.5 degrees Celsius, although scientific forecasts warn that this figure could be topped between 2030 and 2050.

Scientists point out that if humanity takes urgent measures against global warning, it is possible for the global temperatur­e increase to be kept below 1.5 degrees Celsius by the year 2100.

According to the Climate Change 2021: the Physical Science Basis report by the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), by 2030 it is expected that the planet’s average temperatur­e will be 1.5 to 1.6 degrees Celsius higher than the levels of the pre-industrial era in the five relative scenarios of greenhouse gas emissions.

By mid-century the threshold of +1.5 degrees Celsius will have been surpassed according to every scenario – by 0.1 degrees Celsius according to the most optimistic and by 1 degrees Celsius according to the most pessimisti­c.

Assuming that absolutely everything is done to combat climate change, after having risen 1.5 degrees Celsius since the pre-industrial era, the global temperatur­e will be a further 1.4 degrees Celsius higher by the year 2100, forecasts the IPCC.

RISING SEA LEVELS

The global level of oceans has increased by around 20cm since 1900 with the rate of growth practicall­y tripling in the last decade, according to the IPCC report. The melting ice shelves of the Antarctic and Greenland are now the main factor, ahead of melting glaciers.

If global temperatur­es rise two degrees Celsius, the level of the oceans will rise almost half a metre in this century and will go on rising up to almost two metres by 2300, double what the IPCC was forecastin­g only two years ago. Due to the uncertaint­y surroundin­g the ice shelves, the scientists cannot rule out the waters rising by up to two metres by the year 2100.

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