Mekong delta much lower than previously assumed in sea-level rise impact assessments

Publication date

2019-08-28

Authors

Minderhoud, P. S.J.ISNI 0000000493228759
Coumou, LauraISNI 0000000518031013
Erkens, GillesISNI 0000000113672998
Middelkoop, H.ORCID 0000-0002-9549-292XISNI 0000000114994315
Stouthamer, EstherISNI 0000000114614079

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Abstract

Deltas are low-relief landforms that are extremely vulnerable to sea-level rise. Impact assessments of relative sea-level rise in deltas primarily depend on elevation data accuracy and how well the vertical datum matches local sea level. Unfortunately, many major deltas are located in data-sparse regions, forcing researchers and policy makers to use low-resolution, global elevation data obtained from satellite platforms. Using a new, high-accuracy elevation model of the Vietnamese Mekong delta, we show that quality of global elevation data is insufficient and underscore the cruciality to convert to local tidal datum, which is often neglected. The novel elevation model shows that the Mekong delta has an extremely low mean elevation of ~0.8 m above sea level, dramatically lower than the earlier assumed ~2.6 m. Our results imply major uncertainties in sea-level rise impact assessments for the Mekong delta and deltas worldwide, with errors potentially larger than a century of sea-level rise.

Keywords

elevation, sea level rise, subsidence, mekong delta

Citation

Minderhoud, P S J, Coumou, L, Erkens, G, Middelkoop, H & Stouthamer, E 2019, 'Mekong delta much lower than previously assumed in sea-level rise impact assessments', Nature Communications, vol. 10, 3847. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-11602-1