March 6, 2023
2 mins read

Rising sea level threatens Asian megacities

Scientists have long known that sea levels will rise with increasing ocean temperatures, largely because water expands when it warms and melting ice sheets release more water into the oceans….reports Asian Lite News

Sea level rise this century may disproportionately affect certain Asian megacities, including Chennai and Kolkata, as well as western tropical Pacific islands and the western Indian Ocean, according to new research.

The study, led by scientists at the French National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS) and University of La Rochelle in France and co-authored by a scientist at the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR), looked at the effects of natural sea level fluctuations on the projected rise due to climate change.

The team identified several Asian megacities that may face especially significant risks by 2100 if society emits high levels of greenhouse gases – Chennai, Kolkata, Yangon, Bangkok, Ho Chi Minh City, and Manila.

The study, published in the journal Nature Climate Change, showed that internal climate variability could increase sea level rise in some locations by 20-30 per cent more than what would result from climate change alone, exponentially increasing extreme flooding events.

In Manila, for example, coastal flooding events are predicted to occur 18 times more often by 2100 than in 2006, based solely on climate change.

But, in a worst-case scenario, they could occur 96 times more often based on a combination of climate change and internal climate variability.

“The internal climate variability can greatly reinforce or suppress the sea level rise caused by climate change,” said NCAR scientist Aixue Hu, who co-authored the paper.

In a worst-case scenario, the combined effect of climate change and internal climate variability could result in local sea levels rising by more than 50 per cent of what is due to climate change alone, “thus posing significant risks of more severe flooding to coastal megacities and threatening millions of people”, Hu added.

Scientists have long known that sea levels will rise with increasing ocean temperatures, largely because water expands when it warms and melting ice sheets release more water into the oceans.

Studies have also indicated that sea level rise will vary regionally because shifts in ocean currents will likely direct more water to certain coastlines, including the northeastern US.

Internal climate variability will also increase sea level rise along the west coasts of the US and Australia.

The paper stressed that the estimates of sea level rise come with considerable uncertainties because of the complex and unpredictable interactions in Earth’s climate system.

The authors said it’s critical for society to be aware of the potential of extreme sea level rise in order to develop effective adaptation strategies.

ALSO READ: Can India play peacemaker in Russia-Ukraine war?

Previous Story

Salon quality hair makeover at home

Next Story

Post-war and contemporary art online

Latest from Asia News

Learning Forbidden

The imposition of what it called a “gender apartheid system”, one million Afghan girls remain locked out of classrooms as Taliban restrictions crush hopes, deny futures, and silence young voices yearning for

Stalin presses PM for fertilisers

MK Stalin presses PM Modi for fertiliser supplies, warns of disruption to farmers, while declaring Tamil Nadu a BJP ‘no-entry zone’ and vowing DMK’s 2026 victory. Tamil Nadu Chief Minister MK Stalin

No Vote for Hasina

Election Commission told the reporters that “anyone whose NID card has been locked cannot vote from abroad….reports Asian Lite News Bangladesh’s former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and several of her family members

India Warns on Afghan Terror Havens

India said a fresh approach was needed towards Afghanistan….reports Asian Lite News India has called on the international community to ensure that Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM), and other terrorist organisations do not

Modi Leads Global South’s UNSC Reform Push

Modi had publicly welcomed the Pact of the Future’s inclusion of UNSC reform and described that development as a “good beginning The push for UN Security Council (UNSC) reform dominating this year’s
Go toTop

Don't Miss

Gantz, Abbas hold rare talks in Ramallah

The meeting is the first of its kind since 2014,

Nepal begins selling more energy to India

It is the first time that the country is exporting