Published August 30, 2021
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Extreme sea levels at different global warming levels

  • 1. Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
  • 2. UNESCO-IHE Institute for Water Education
  • 3. University of Twente
  • 4. European Commission Joint Research Centre Institute
  • 5. Princeton University
  • 6. University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign
  • 7. University of Melbourne
  • 8. Rutgers University
  • 9. National Center for Supercomputing Applications
  • 10. University of Bologna

Description

The Paris agreement focused global climate mitigation policy on limiting global warming to 1.5 or 2 °C above pre-industrial levels. Consequently, projections of hazards and risk are increasingly framed in terms of global warming levels rather than emission scenarios. Here, we use a multimethod approach to describe changes in extreme sea levels driven by changes in mean sea level associated with a wide range of global warming levels, from 1.5 to 5 °C, and for a large number of locations, providing uniform coverage over most of the world's coastlines. We estimate that by 2100 ~50% of the 7,000+ locations considered will experience the present-day 100-yr extreme-sea-level event at least once a year, even under 1.5 °C of warming, and often well before the end of the century. The tropics appear more sensitive than the Northern high latitudes, where some locations do not see this frequency change even for the highest global warming levels. Combining previous estimates in a multimethod approach, extreme sea levels are assessed under global warming levels of 1.5–5 °C at over 7,000 coastal sites worldwide. By 2100 or before, about 50% of locations exhibit present-day 100-year extreme sea levels at least once per year, even at 1.5 °C of warming.
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