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Wednesday, 30 October 2019
Rising sea levels pose threat to homes of 300m people – study
River erosion in Bangladesh. The numbers at risk of an annual flood by
2050 in Bangladesh increased more than eightfold in the study.
Photograph: Zakir Hossain Chowdhury/Barcroft Media
More than three times more people are at risk from rising sea levels than previously believed, research suggests.
Land that is currently home to 300 million people will flood at least
once a year by 2050 unless carbon emissions are cut significantly and
coastal defences strengthened, says the study, published in Nature Communications. This is far above the previous estimate of 80 million.
The upward revision is based on a more sophisticated assessment of
the topography of coastlines around the world. Previous models used
satellite data that overestimated the altitude of land due to tall
buildings and trees. The new study used artificial intelligence to
compensate for such misreadings.
Researchers
said the magnitude of difference from the previous Nasa study came as a
shock. “These assessments show the potential of climate change to
reshape cities, economies, coastlines and entire global regions within
our lifetimes,” said Scott Kulp, the lead author of the study and a
senior scientist at Climate Central.
“As the tideline rises higher than the ground people call home,
nations will increasingly confront questions about whether, how much and
how long coastal defences can protect them.”
The biggest change in estimates was in Asia, which is home to the
majority of the world’s population. The numbers at risk of an annual
flood by 2050 increased more than eightfold in Bangladesh, sevenfold in
India, twelvefold in India and threefold in China.
The threat is already being felt in Indonesia, where the government recently announced plans to move the capital city
from Jakarta, which is subsiding and increasingly vulnerable to
flooding. The new figures show 23 million people are at risk in
Indonesia, up from the previous estimate of 5 million.
Benjamin Strauss, Climate Central’s chief scientist and CEO, said
more countries may need to follow Indonesia’s lead unless sea defences
were strengthened or carbon emissions were cut. “An incredible,
disproportionate amount of human development is on flat, low-lying land
near the sea. We are really set up to suffer,” he said.
The authors say the calculations could still underestimate the
dangers because they are based on standard projections of sea level rise
in a scenario known as RCP2.6, which assumes emissions cuts in line
with the promises made under the Paris agreement. Countries are
currently not on course to meet these pledges.
In a worst-case scenario with greater instability of the Antarctic
ice sheet, as many as 640 million people could be threatened by 2100,
the scientists say.
Strauss said a World Bank study using the old elevation data
estimated damages of $1tn per year by mid-century, and this would need
to be updated. More sophisticated topographical measurements would also
be necessary, he said.
“The need for coastal defences and higher planning for higher seas is
much greater than we thought if we are to avoid economic harm and
instability,” said Strauss. “The silver lining to our research: although
many more people are threatened than we thought, the benefits of action
are greater.”
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