The environment in the news wenesday, 19 March 2008


Sea level has risen more than thought, study says



Download 451.28 Kb.
Page10/17
Date20.10.2016
Size451.28 Kb.
#5455
1   ...   6   7   8   9   10   11   12   13   ...   17

Sea level has risen more than thought, study says

FLOOD: Reservoirs may be the biggest factor affecting sea levels, the dean of National Central University's College of Earth Science, Benjamin Chao, said yesterday

By Meggie Lu

STAFF REPORTER



Tuesday, Mar 18, 2008, Page 2
The rise in sea levels in the past 80 years has been grossly underestimated and therefore greater action needs to be taken to combat global warming, the dean of National Central University's College of Earth Science Benjamin Chao (趙丰) said yesterday at a press conference.
Last year, the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change published a Nobel-prize winning report warning that rising sea levels, caused mostly by global warming, could flood parts of the world if not slowed, Chao said.
"Scientific findings previously supported the estimate that sea levels rose 10cm over the past 80 years, but the actual number may be 13cm," said Chao, a former NASA scientist, citing his study which was published in Science magazine on March 13.
Chao's idea for the study came from his observation that the slope of sea level increase was curiously slower from the 1960s to the 1990s relative to pre-1960s and post-1990s periods, "which coincided with a time when the world was rapidly building artificial reservoirs," Chao said.
The observation led him to believe that while rising sea levels were partially brought about by natural causes like the thermal expansion of sea water and the melting of icebergs and ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctica, human factors should also be considered.
Following four months of data compilation with doctoral student Henry Wu (伍允豪) and masters student Li Yi-siang (李毅翔), Chao found that if all the water impounded in the world's 30,000 reservoirs were released back into the ocean, global sea levels would increase by another 3cm, he said.
From his study, Chao postulated that reservoirs may be the largest human factor affecting sea levels.
"The implication is two-fold -- first, the speed at which the sea level is increasing is faster than we had previously calculated," he said.
Before the study it was thought the global sea level increased at 0.18mm per year. However, the new finding showed that the actual annual rise is 0.25cm, Chao said.
"The second implication is that `the more we know, the more we know we don't know,'" he said.
"So far we can account for 0.12cm of the annual rise in sea levels -- while previously that comprised 70 percent of the annual amount. Now it means we don't know more than half the causes of the increase," he said.
Fifty-five percent of the causes are unknown, he said.
Chao said instead of building more dams, humans need to reduce carbon emissions and halt global warming.

http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/taiwan/archives/2008/03/18/2003406014
Back to Menu

_________________________________________________________________________


RONA MEDIA UPDATE

THE ENVIRONMENT IN THE NEWS

Tuesday 18 March 2008

UNEP or UN in the News

  • The New York Times: Melting Pace of Glaciers Is Accelerating, Report Says



General Environment News

  • MSNBC: Ship's pilot charged in Bay Area oil disaster

  • MSNBC: Lawmakers probe potential EPA conflicts

  • The New York Times: In a Warmer Yellowstone Park, a Shifting Environmental Balance

  • The New York Times: Queenfish: A Cold War Tale

  • The Washington Post: Olympic Officials Want to Clear the Air

  • The Washington Post: Opponents Want Legislature to Halt Construction

  • The Los Angeles Times: Ship pilot in S.F. Bay spill is charged

  • The Los Angeles Times: Land near Yellowstone safe from mining under deal

  • The Los Angeles Times: Bevy of blues emerges in a breeding frenzy

  • San Francisco Chronicle: Mayor aside, Richmond no match for Chevron

  • San Francisco Chronicle: Oakland Port to take up diesel emissions

  • San Francisco Chronicle: Threatened frogs leaving downtown S.F.

  • San Francisco Chronicle: Cosco Busan pilot charged with pair of crimes

  • The Globe and Mail: Oil price plunges $4.53 a barrel

  • The Wall Street Journal: Next President Needs to Uncap Debate on Cost of Emissions Curbs

  • The Wall Street Journal: EPA Says Carbon Caps Won't Harm Economy Much




UNEP or UN in the News

Melting Pace of Glaciers Is Accelerating, Report Says


By ANDREW C. REVKIN

The New York Times

Tuesday March 18, 2008

Most of the world’s mountain glaciers, many of which feed major rivers and water supplies, are shrinking at an accelerating pace as the climate warms, according to a new report.

The report charts changes through 2006. It was issued Monday by the World Glacier Monitoring Service, which is based at the University of Zurich and supported by the United Nations Environment Program.

“The latest figures are part of what appears to be an accelerating trend with no apparent end in sight,” said Wilfried Haeberli, the director of the glacier service.

The study included data from 30 glaciers spread around nine mountainous regions.

Several ice experts not associated with the report said year-to-year changes in the overall mass of ice locked in these moving frozen rivers did not always denote a trend. But they added that the long-term trend was clearly toward a warming world with less mountain ice — and related water troubles, including both floods and shortages, from the Andes to the Himalayas.

The global average temperature dropped from its seasonal norm in recent months, and the Northern Hemisphere has had unusually extensive snow. But many experts have said those developments are almost assuredly a short-term wiggle on the way to more warming and melting from the influence of long-lived greenhouse gases produced mainly by burning fuels and forests.

The big danger ahead, several glacier experts said, is that the loss of glaciers would take away a summertime source of river water, drinking water and hydroelectric power in populous, relatively poor places like South Asia and the cities along the western slope of the Andes.

“Millions of people depend on the runoff from mountain snow and ice in the warm seasons,” said Peter Gleick, who has studied water and climate for two decades and is the president of the Pacific Institute, a private research group in Oakland, Calif. “Climate change is going to make that runoff disappear.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/18/science/earth/18melt.html?ex=1363492800&en=e19b4b86c09cae9f&ei=5088&partner=rssnyt&emc=rss

General Environmental News



Download 451.28 Kb.

Share with your friends:
1   ...   6   7   8   9   10   11   12   13   ...   17




The database is protected by copyright ©ininet.org 2024
send message

    Main page