Authors
Robert J Nicholls, Natasha Marinova, Jason A Lowe, Sally Brown, Pier Vellinga, Diogo De Gusmao, Jochen Hinkel, Richard SJ Tol
Publication date
2011/1/13
Journal
Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society A: mathematical, physical and engineering sciences
Volume
369
Issue
1934
Pages
161-181
Publisher
The Royal Society Publishing
Description
The range of future climate-induced sea-level rise remains highly uncertain with continued concern that large increases in the twenty-first century cannot be ruled out. The biggest source of uncertainty is the response of the large ice sheets of Greenland and west Antarctica. Based on our analysis, a pragmatic estimate of sea-level rise by 2100, for a temperature rise of 4°C or more over the same time frame, is between 0.5 m and 2 m—the probability of rises at the high end is judged to be very low, but of unquantifiable probability. However, if realized, an indicative analysis shows that the impact potential is severe, with the real risk of the forced displacement of up to 187 million people over the century (up to 2.4% of global population). This is potentially avoidable by widespread upgrade of protection, albeit rather costly with up to 0.02 per cent of global domestic product needed, and much higher in certain nations …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
RJ Nicholls, N Marinova, JA Lowe, S Brown, P Vellinga… - Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society A …, 2011