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Greenland ice could fuel severe US sea level rise
Published in Saudi Press Agency on 27 - 05 - 2009

New York, Boston and other
cities on North America's northeast coast could face a rise in
sea level this century that would exceed forecasts for the rest
of the planet if Greenland's ice sheet keeps melting as fast as
it is now, Reuters quoted researchers as saying today.
Sea levels off the northeast coast of North America could
rise by 12 to 20 inches (about 30 to 50 cm) more than other
coastal areas if the Greenland glacier-melt continues to
accelerate at its present pace, the researchers reported.
This is because the current rate of ice-melting in
Greenland could send so much fresh water into the salty north
Atlantic Ocean that it could change the vast ocean circulation
pattern sometimes called the conveyor belt. Scientists call
this pattern the meridional overturning circulation.
"If the Greenland melt continues to accelerate, we could
see significant impacts this century on the northeast U.S.
coast from the resulting sea level rise," said Aixie Hu, lead
author of an article on the subject in the journal Geophysical
Research Letters.
"Major northeastern cities are directly in the path of the
greatest rise," said Hu, a scientist at the National Center for
Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado.
This is an even bleaker assessment than an earlier study
indicated. A March article in the journal Nature Geoscience
said warmer water temperatures could shift ocean currents so as
to raise sea levels off the U.S. northeast coast by about 8
inches (20 cm) more than the average global sea level rise.
NOT LIKELY BUT POSSIBLE
However, this earlier research did not include the impact
of melting Greenland ice, which would speed changes in ocean
circulation and send 4 to 12 more inches (some 10 to 30 cm) of
water toward northeastern North America, on top of the average
global sea level rise.
That could put residents of New York, Boston and Halifax,
Nova Scotia, at risk since these cities and others lie close to
sea level now, Hu said in answer to e-mailed questions.
Not only would coastal residents be at direct risk from
flooding but drainage systems would suffer as salty ocean water
would move back into river deltas, changing the biological
environment, Hu wrote in an e-mail.
"In a flooding zone, because the higher sea level may
impede the function of the drainage system, the future flood
may become more severe," he wrote. If cities are prone to
subsidence -- where the ground sinks -- higher sea levels would
also make that problem worse, according to Hu.
The ice that covers much of Greenland is melting faster now
due to global climate change, raising world sea levels. But sea
level does not rise evenly around the globe. Sea level in the
North Atlantic is now 28 inches (71 cm) lower than in the North
Pacific, because the Atlantic has a dense, compact layer of
deep, cold water that the Pacific lacks.
Greenland's ice-melt rate has increased by 7 percent a year
since 1996 but Hu said it is unlikely to continue. Still, he
and his co-authors ran computer simulations that included this
fast-paced melting, along with more moderate scenarios with
ice-melt increasing by 3 percent or 1 percent annually.
Hu said it was hard to say whether the 7 percent annual
increase could go on for the next 50 years but said it was
possible since the current rate of increase in climate-warming
carbon dioxide is higher than the high end of projections by
the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.


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