May 31
On of the most significant potential impacts of climate change is
ocean level rise that may cause inundation of coastal areas and islands erosion. As global temperatures increase, ocean level rise already underway is expected to accelerate due to a thermal expansion of upper layers of the ocean and melting of glaciers. If ocean level rise accelerates as climate change scenarios project, the losses of property will be even greater than anticipated. Extensive losses of coastal wetlands and beaches seem likely. In past eras of ocean level rise wetlands and beaches could retreat naturally inland but roads and coastal structures have closed off this option of natural retreat in much of the US coastline. The result is that the total area of beaches and wetlands may diminish greatly in the US over this century. Some developing countries are especially vulnerable to ocean level rise due to their low- lying nature and limited financial resources to respond. Among the most vulnerable are countries with large populations in deltaic coastal regions such as Bangladesh,
Viet Nam,
China and
Egypt.
Two populous island nations, the Philippines and Indonesia, have millions who face displacement from their homes from oceanlevel rise. Several small island state nations including the Maldives in the Indian Ocean and the Marshall Islands and Tuvalu in the Pacific could face extinction within this century if rates of ocean level rise accelerate. Most of their populations live very close to ocean and a rise of as little as a meter could prove devastating. Even before their lands had become uninhabitable due to inundation some would face loss of their fresh water supply due to salt-water intrusion. In the Caribbean many small island nations are periodically ravaged by hurricanes that sometimes in a few hours wipe out development gains of a decade. Although ocean level rise may pose a serious threat to some Caribbean nations perhaps the greatest challenge associated with climate change may be an increased incidence of super hurricanes such as Hurricane Gilbert that wreaked such havoc in 1988 or Hurricane Mitch in 1998 whose severe rains resulted in deaths of thousands, largely in Central America.
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June 2nd, 2008 at 6:12 am
I just wanted to let you know that I appreciate a lot this initiative, I am from Romania and not much attention is given to the global warming, too bad, we all live on the same planet.