A
very rare reference to climate change by RT
As usual the magnitude and timescale is completely off. Already sea level has been raised 1 foot off North America by changes in ocean currents.
But I suppose the news is that NASA are saying this is locked in.
But I suppose the news is that NASA are saying this is locked in.
Paul Beckwith projects greater sea level rise than this in less time.
Sea
levels ‘locked’ into 3-foot rise by century’s end – NASA
RT,
28
August, 2015
Sea
levels around the world have risen an average of 3 inches since 1992
and are now rising faster than they were 50 years ago, NASA warned.
What’s worse, they are currently on track to increase 3 feet (90
cm) or more by the end of the century.
READ MORE: Road-surfing Russians ride typhoon waves with wakeboards tied to cars (VIDEOS)
The
dire news comes as NASA announced an “intensive
research effort” currently
underway that very clearly shows a sea level rise of several feet
is “unavoidable.” Scientists
point to the expansion of warming oceans, melting glaciers, and
shrinking polar ice sheets as reasons behind the climbing waters.
“People
need to understand that the planet is not only changing, it’s
changed,” NASA
scientist Tom Wagner said this week to Reuters.
“If
you’re going to put in major infrastructure like a water treatment
plant or a power plant in a coastal zone ... we have data you can now
use to estimate what the impacts are going to be in the next 100
years.”
What’s the connection between the Earth getting warmer & the sea level getting higher? We'll tell you#EarthRightNow https://t.co/smFj5M2diT
— NASA (@NASA) August 27, 2015
Previous
estimates by the UN in 2013 stated that sea levels would rise
anywhere from 1 to 3 feet (30 – 90 cm) by the year 2100, but NASA
scientist Steven Nerem said its most recent data shows clearly
that “the
higher end of that range is more likely, and the question remains how
that range might have to shift upwards.”
Notably,
sea levels haven’t risen at the same rate across the word. Some
locations have seen the sea level rise 9 inches, NASA said, while
other regions, such as the US West Coast, have actually seen sea
levels go down. The West Coast drop has been attributed to “natural
variation,” however,
and the sea level is expected to rise sharply there over the coming
decades.
A
dramatic increase in sea level would pose numerous risks for tens of
millions of people around the world. More than 123 million people in
the US alone – about 40 percent of the population – lived in
counties directly on the shorelines as of 2010, according to the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. NASA has also
expressed concern that global warming could wreak
havoc on
its space program in Florida.
Our OMG mission is mapping the seafloor around Greenland to document ice loss:http://t.co/mIKznha8hy#EarthRightNowpic.twitter.com/Sp4K1ioeHc
— NASA (@NASA) August 27, 2015
As
temperatures rise, more and more ice continues to melt. Recently, a
single piece of ice broke away from the Jakobshavn glacier in
Greenland that was so large it could bury the entire island of
Manhattan under 1,000 feet of ice,CNN reported.
This glacier could raise global sea levels by about 1.6 feet on its
own if it were to completely melt, glaciologist Eric Rignot from the
University of California in Irvine warned, according to
the Washington
Post.
In
fact, if the entire Greenland ice sheet were to melt, sea levels
would rise about 20 feet. It’s already shed 2,500 gigatons of ice
since 2004. A gigaton equals approximately 1 billion metric tons.
One
of the most important questions that remains unanswered is just how
fast the polar ice sheets are going to melt as a result of the higher
temperatures Earth is experiencing. Regardless of the pace, however,
Rignot said any attempt to reverse current trends would
take “centuries.”
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