Globalwarming awareness2007: Sea Level, Global Warming
The 11 March 2007, by Tiger
Globalwarming awareness2007: Scientists warn that the biggest danger from global warming is
raising sea level through a combination of increased
water from glacier melting and warmer water temperatures causing
expansion. Sea level has risen 4 to 10 inches this past century and is
projected to rise up to 3 feet by 2100. For every foot of sea level rise
we can expect about 100 feet of coastal flooding.
Today, about 25%
of the world’s population lives within 62 miles (100 kilometers) of a
shoreline, and this figure is likely to increase to 50% over the next
twenty five years as people flock to coastal cities. Thirteen of the
world’s 20 largest cities are now located on a coast. As sea levels go up
we can expect to see increasingly negative
impacts on coastal areas. Storms will wreck a greater
number of coastal properties, low-lying areas will be flooded, beaches
eroded,
wetland
ecosystems and fish and wildlife habitats destroyed and saltwater will
contaminate aquifers threatening human water supplies.
The U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) estimates that a two foot rise in sea level would
eliminate approximately 10,000 square miles of land, an area equal to the
size of Massachusetts and Delaware combined. The Federal Emergency
Management Agency
(FEMA) estimates that about 25 percent of all buildings
within 500 feet of the U.S. coastline will be taken by erosion in the next
60 years. The wild card in all this is
abrupt sea level rise due to rapid melting of the
Greenland ice Sheet.