Select Peer-Reviewed Scientific Papers
Flooded Future: Global vulnerability to sea level rise worse than previously understood
- As a result of heat-trapping pollution from human activities, rising sea levels could within three decades push chronic floods higher than land currently home to 300 million people
- By 2100, areas now home to 200 million people could fall permanently below the high tide line
- The new figures are the result of an improved global elevation dataset produced by Climate Central using machine learning, and revealing that coastal elevations are significantly lower than previously understood across wide areas
- The threat is concentrated in coastal Asia and could have profound economic and political consequences within the lifetimes of people alive today
- Findings are documented in a new peer-reviewed paper in the journal Nature Communications
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Report: Web Version and PDF
Ocean at the Door: New Homes and the Rising Sea
Description: Recent housing growth rates are faster in ten-year flood-risk zones in a third of all coastal states. This report was updated in July 2019 with new data.
Date: July 2019
Advancing Tools and Methods for Flexible Adaptation Pathways and Science Policy Integration
Authors:
- Chapter 3: Vivien Gornitz, Michael Oppenheimer, Robert Kopp, Philip Orton, Maya Buchanan, Ning Lin, Radley Horton, and Daniel Bader
- Chapter 4: Philip Orton, Ning Lin, Vivien Gornitz, Brian Colle, James Booth, Kairui Feng, Maya Buchanan, Michael Oppenheimer, Lesley Patrick
Journal: Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
Publication Date: March 2019