South China Morning Post

SEA LEVELS ARE RISING FASTER THAN EVER

Ministry urges preventive action after report shows coastal provinces hit particular­ly hard by encroachin­g water line of up to 42 metres inland

- Cheryl Heng cheryl.heng@scmp.com

Sea levels along the mainland’s densely populated coastal provinces are rising faster than ever, sending the water line up to 42 metres inland in some places, according to the Ministry of Natural Resources.

In an annual report released late last month, the ministry said sea levels rose an average of 3.4mm a year from 1980 to 2020, up from the 2.6mm 30-year average in 2010.

In the next 30 years, coastal sea levels were expected to rise by 55 mm to 170mm, the report said, urging preventive action. “China should protect its coasts ... and improve the country’s ability to adapt to rising sea levels,” it said.

The reported increases are on a par with figures worldwide, with the best estimates putting the global average rise in the past decade at 3.6mm per year, according to Benjamin Horton, director of the Earth Observator­y of Singapore at Nanyang Technologi­cal University.

“Sea levels are rising primarily because global temperatur­es are rising, causing ocean water to expand and land ice to melt,” Horton said. “About a third of its current rise comes from thermal expansion – water grows in volume as it warms. The rest comes from the melting of ice on land.”

The ministry said that in 2020, the average temperatur­es around the world were 1.2 degrees Celsius higher than pre-industrial levels and among the warmest on record.

The report said sea level rises intensifie­d storm surges, erosion and salt tides, with provinces such as Zhejiang and Guangdong hit particular­ly hard.

In Zhejiang alone, Typhoon Hagupit inflicted more than 73 billion yuan (HK$88.1 billion) in agricultur­e and infrastruc­ture losses when it hit in August.

The report said that while there had been improvemen­ts overall in coastal erosion since 2019, conditions had deteriorat­ed in Liaoning, Jiangsu, Fujian and Guangxi. In Yancheng, Jiangsu province, the water line moved as much as 42 metres further inland last year, the report said.

Concerns of saltwater contaminat­ing freshwater supplies had grown in the past year for Liaoning, Hebei and Jiangsu.

Compoundin­g the problem is the practice of groundwate­r extraction that causes land subsidence. “People are pumping out the water from rocks below cities and towns. That lowers the land surface at the same time that the sea levels are rising. So more of the housing, factories and power stations are becoming more vulnerable,” said John Moore, chief scientist at the College of Global Change and Earth System Science at Beijing Normal University.

Moore said another cause of concern was the increasing frequency of floods as sea levels rose.

“The mean sea level has a dramatic impact on the return frequency of large floods. If you have an event that is expected once every 100 years, a rise in sea level by 30cm – which is less than what we expect to happen this century – that ‘100-year flood’ becomes something you expect almost every year,” he said.

Moore said that by 2100, the world’s oceans could rise by a metre. In the worst-case scenario where Antarctic ice loss was left untackled, sea levels could rise by 2 metres.

The big question is the melting of giant ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctica. “If all the ice in Greenland melted, it would raise global sea levels by seven metres,” Horton said. “Antarctica is a giant [...] If a few per cent of the Antarctic ice sheet were to melt, it would cause devastatin­g [impact].”

China should protect its coasts ... and improve the country’s ability to adapt to rising sea levels MINISTRY OF NATURAL RESOURCES

 ?? Photo: Xinhua ?? Zhejiang province is vulnerable to rising sea levels.
Photo: Xinhua Zhejiang province is vulnerable to rising sea levels.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China