Los Angeles Times

Rising sea: ‘It’s not going to stop’

As oceans surge globally, the Pacific’s diminished levels will reverse, experts say.

- MATT HAMILTON matt.hamilton @latimes.com Twitter: @MattHjourn­o

Here’s one trend California is behind on: rising sea levels.

For the last 23 years, ocean levels around the world have climbed by about 3 inches on average, and NASA scientists say the sea will continue to rise as warming temperatur­es cause ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctica to melt.

But California, and the rest of the western United States, has actually seen ocean levels fall. That’s about to change, thanks to a shift in weather patterns, and scientists are sounding the alarm.

New satellite measuremen­ts from NASA suggest that ocean levels could rise by 3 feet or more globally by the end of the century. The question faced by scientists and policymake­rs is not whether oceans will rise, but how fast and by how much.

“People need to be prepared for sea level rise,” said Joshua Willis, an oceanograp­her at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in La Cañada Flintridge. “It’s not going to stop.”

If ocean levels are rising, where is the additional water coming from?

Steve Nerem, a scientist at the University of Colorado, Boulder, said that about one-third of the rising sea level is a result of the ocean expanding as it absorbs heat trapped by greenhouse gases and becomes warmer. Another third comes from melting glaciers, and the rest comes from the melting of enormous ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctica.

How much ice is actually melting in Greenland and Antarctica?

During the last decade, Greenland’s ice sheet lost about 303 gigatons of ice on average each year, while Antarctica’s ice sheet lost about 118 gigatons annually on average. One gigaton is a billion metric tons.

Why did California’s sea level fall during the last few decades?

Waters off the coast of the western U.S. have had lower surface temperatur­es, largely because of the Pacific Decadal Oscillatio­n, or PDO. This pattern of wind, ocean current and temperatur­e variations can bring warm or cold phases for several years — or even decades. Since 1998, some scientists say, we have experience­d a cold phase that has counteract­ed the effects of climate change and prevented sea levels from rising. Will California’s sea levels always be lower than elsewhere?

No, and scientists say a reversal in the Pacific Decadal Oscillatio­n could cause sea levels to catch up to increases seen elsewhere. According to JPL’s Willis, current measuremen­ts indicate that a switch in the PDO already occurred.

“We can expect accelerate­d rates of sea level rise along this coast over the next decade as the region recovers from its temporary sea level ‘deficit,’ ” Willis said.

Does this have anything to do with El Niño?

Yes. Some climatolog­ists think of El Niño as a shortterm phenomenon that lies on top of the more longterm temperatur­e fluctuatio­ns associated with the Pacific Decadal Oscillatio­n. Warmer PDOs are more conducive to El Niños.

What are we supposed to do about rising sea levels?

The key word stressed by scientists: planning. Tom Wagner, cryosphere program manager for NASA, said communitie­s along coastal zones should factor in the increase in sea levels when considerin­g major infrastruc­ture projects such as a water treatment plant or power plant. Rising sea levels could mean more erosion or flooding associated with a storm surge, he said.

What’s the likelihood that sea levels stay the same or actually fall?

Don’t count on it. Over the next century, the sea may rise between 1 1⁄2 and 3 feet or possibly more, said Eric Rignot, a research scientist at JPL and a professor at UC Irvine. And ice sheets react to warming by melting faster and faster. Any reversal of the inevitable ice melt “would take centuries,” he said. “Some of the measuremen­ts collected by NASA are an important red flag on what’s about to come.”

 ?? Paul Sakuma Associated Press ?? WAVES POUND a sea wall in Pacifica, Calif., in 2010. Ocean levels could rise by 3 feet or more globally by the end of the century, new NASA measuremen­ts show.
Paul Sakuma Associated Press WAVES POUND a sea wall in Pacifica, Calif., in 2010. Ocean levels could rise by 3 feet or more globally by the end of the century, new NASA measuremen­ts show.

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