Sea level rise projections for Northern Europe under RCP8.5

Sea level rise poses a significant threat to coastal communities, infrastructure, and ecosystems. Sea level rise is not uniform globally but is affected by a range of regional factors. In this study, we calculate regional projections of 21st century sea level rise in northern Europe, focusing on the...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Climate Research
Main Authors: Grinsted, A. (author), Jevrejeva, S. (author), Riva, R.E.M. (author), Dahl-Jensen, D. (author)
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Inter-Research 2015
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Online Access:http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:36f9df68-72b1-4aad-90cb-35861ff3833a
Description
Summary:Sea level rise poses a significant threat to coastal communities, infrastructure, and ecosystems. Sea level rise is not uniform globally but is affected by a range of regional factors. In this study, we calculate regional projections of 21st century sea level rise in northern Europe, focusing on the British Isles, the Baltic Sea, and the North Sea. The input to the regional sea level projection is a probabilistic projection of the major components of the global sea level budget. Local sea level rise is partly compensated by vertical land movement from glacial isostatic adjustment. We explore the uncertainties beyond the likely range provided by the IPCC, including the risk and potential rate of marine ice sheet collapse. Our median 21st century relative sea level rise projection is 0.8 m near London and Hamburg, with a relative sea level drop of 0.1 m in the Bay of Bothnia (near Oulu, Finland). Considerable uncertainties remain in both the sea level budget and in the regional expression of sea level rise. The greatest uncertainties are associated with Antarctic ice loss, and uncertainties are skewed towards higher values, with the 95th percentile being characterized by an additional 0.9 m sea level rise above median projections. Geoscience & Remote Sensing Civil Engineering and Geosciences