Perspective on Regional Sea-level Change and Coastal Impacts
Publication date
2024-11-12
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Document Type
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Abstract
We synthesize sea-level science developments, priorities and practitioner needs at the end of the 10-year World Climate Research Program Grand Challenge 'Regional Sea-Level Change and Coastal Impacts'. Sea-level science and associated climate services have progressed but are unevenly distributed. There remains deep uncertainty concerning high-end and long-term sea-level projections due to indeterminate emissions, the ice sheet response and other climate tipping points. These are priorities for sea-level science. At the same time practitioners need climate services that provide localized information including median and curated high-end sea-level projections for long-term planning, together with information to address near-term pressures, including extreme sea level-related hazards and land subsidence, which can greatly exceed current rates of climate-induced sea-level rise in some populous coastal settlements. To maximise the impact of scientific knowledge, ongoing co-production between science and practitioner communities is essential. Here we report on recent progress and ways forward for the next decade.
Keywords
Environmental Science (miscellaneous), Ecology, Law, SDG 13 - Climate Action
Citation
McInnes, K L, Nicholls, R J, Van De Wal, R, Behar, D, Haigh, I D, Hamlington, B D, Hinkel, J, Hirschfeld, D, Horton, B P, Melet, A, Palmer, M D, Robel, A A, Stammer, D & Sullivan, A 2024, 'Perspective on Regional Sea-level Change and Coastal Impacts', Cambridge Prisms: Coastal Futures, vol. 2, e16. https://doi.org/10.1017/cft.2024.15