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A high-end estimate of sea level rise for practitioners

A high-end estimate of sea level rise for practitioners
A high-end estimate of sea level rise for practitioners
Sea level rise (SLR) is a long-lasting consequence of climate change because global anthropogenic warming takes centuries to millennia to equilibrate for the deep ocean and ice sheets. SLR projections based on climate models support policy analysis, risk assessment and adaptation planning today, despite their large uncertainties. The central range of the SLR distribution is estimated by process-based models. However, risk-averse practitioners often require information about plausible future conditions that lie in the tails of the SLR distribution, which are poorly defined by existing models. Here, a community effort combining scientists and practitioners builds on a framework of discussing physical evidence to quantify high-end global SLR for practitioners. The approach is complementary to the IPCC AR6 report and provides further physically plausible high-end scenarios. High-end estimates for the different SLR components are developed for two climate scenarios at two timescales. For global warming of +2°C in 2100 (RCP2.6/SSP1-2.6) relative to pre-industrial values our high-end global SLR estimates are up to 0.9 m in 2100 and 2.5 m in 2300. Similarly, for a (RCP8.5/SSP5-8.5), we estimate up to 1.6 m in 2100 and up to 10.4 m in 2300. The large and growing differences between the scenarios beyond 2100 emphasize the long-term benefits of mitigation. However, even a modest 2°C warming may cause multi-meter SLR on centennial time scales with profound consequences for coastal areas. Earlier high-end assessments focused on instability mechanisms in Antarctica, while here we emphasize the importance of the timing of ice shelf collapse around Antarctica. This is highly uncertain due to low understanding of the driving processes. Hence both process understanding and emission scenario control high-end SLR.
2328-4277
van de Wal, R.S.W.
541169da-bfec-4510-943c-bb114d9d7481
Nicholls, R.J.
a7a02ca6-b971-453a-8cbd-537d9301c823
Behar, D.
9fae6b87-e558-4f7a-8ead-ddd82ff90c14
Haigh, Ivan
945ff20a-589c-47b7-b06f-61804367eb2d
et al.
van de Wal, R.S.W.
541169da-bfec-4510-943c-bb114d9d7481
Nicholls, R.J.
a7a02ca6-b971-453a-8cbd-537d9301c823
Behar, D.
9fae6b87-e558-4f7a-8ead-ddd82ff90c14
Haigh, Ivan
945ff20a-589c-47b7-b06f-61804367eb2d

van de Wal, R.S.W., Nicholls, R.J. and Behar, D. , et al. (2022) A high-end estimate of sea level rise for practitioners. Earth's Future, 10 (11), [e2022EF002751]. (doi:10.1029/2022EF002751).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Sea level rise (SLR) is a long-lasting consequence of climate change because global anthropogenic warming takes centuries to millennia to equilibrate for the deep ocean and ice sheets. SLR projections based on climate models support policy analysis, risk assessment and adaptation planning today, despite their large uncertainties. The central range of the SLR distribution is estimated by process-based models. However, risk-averse practitioners often require information about plausible future conditions that lie in the tails of the SLR distribution, which are poorly defined by existing models. Here, a community effort combining scientists and practitioners builds on a framework of discussing physical evidence to quantify high-end global SLR for practitioners. The approach is complementary to the IPCC AR6 report and provides further physically plausible high-end scenarios. High-end estimates for the different SLR components are developed for two climate scenarios at two timescales. For global warming of +2°C in 2100 (RCP2.6/SSP1-2.6) relative to pre-industrial values our high-end global SLR estimates are up to 0.9 m in 2100 and 2.5 m in 2300. Similarly, for a (RCP8.5/SSP5-8.5), we estimate up to 1.6 m in 2100 and up to 10.4 m in 2300. The large and growing differences between the scenarios beyond 2100 emphasize the long-term benefits of mitigation. However, even a modest 2°C warming may cause multi-meter SLR on centennial time scales with profound consequences for coastal areas. Earlier high-end assessments focused on instability mechanisms in Antarctica, while here we emphasize the importance of the timing of ice shelf collapse around Antarctica. This is highly uncertain due to low understanding of the driving processes. Hence both process understanding and emission scenario control high-end SLR.

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Accepted/In Press date: 3 October 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 22 October 2022
Published date: 7 November 2022

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 490379
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/490379
ISSN: 2328-4277
PURE UUID: 060655ee-b228-46a8-9bda-6b96837962ac
ORCID for Ivan Haigh: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9722-3061

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Date deposited: 24 May 2024 16:36
Last modified: 25 May 2024 01:41

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Contributors

Author: R.S.W. van de Wal
Author: R.J. Nicholls
Author: D. Behar
Author: Ivan Haigh ORCID iD
Corporate Author: et al.

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