海平面
大洪水
下沉
气候变化
沿海洪水
海平面上升
气候学
自然地理学
海洋学
地质学
环境科学
地理
构造盆地
地貌学
考古
作者
Robert J. Nicholls,Daniël Lincke,Jochen Hinkel,Sally Brown,Athanasios T. Vafeidis,Benoît Meyssignac,Susan Hanson,Jan-Ludolf Merkens,Jiayi Fang
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41558-021-00993-z
摘要
Climate-induced sea-level rise and vertical land movements, including natural and human-induced subsidence in sedimentary coastal lowlands, combine to change relative sea levels around the world’s coasts. Although this affects local rates of sea-level rise, assessments of the coastal impacts of subsidence are lacking on a global scale. Here, we quantify global-mean relative sea-level rise to be 2.6 mm yr−1 over the past two decades. However, as coastal inhabitants are preferentially located in subsiding locations, they experience an average relative sea-level rise up to four times faster at 7.8 to 9.9 mm yr−1. These results indicate that the impacts and adaptation needs are much higher than reported global sea-level rise measurements suggest. In particular, human-induced subsidence in and surrounding coastal cities can be rapidly reduced with appropriate policy for groundwater utilization and drainage. Such policy would offer substantial and rapid benefits to reduce growth of coastal flood exposure due to relative sea-level rise. Land subsidence and uplift influence the rate of sea-level rise. Most coastal populations live in subsiding areas and experience average rates of relative sea-level rise three to four times faster than due to climate change alone, indicating the need for policy to address subsidence.
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