Mashable 03月15日
NASA dropped a new report. Its a wake-up call.
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NASA最新分析显示,2024年海平面上升超出预期,自1993年卫星开始测量以来,全球海平面已上升超过10厘米,且上升速率正在加快。融冰和热膨胀是主要原因,其中融冰占比约三分之二。未来几十年,美国沿海地区海平面预计将上升10英寸到1英尺,本世纪末可能上升数英尺。长期海平面上升幅度取决于人类应对气候变化的选择。尽管过去的上升幅度可能不明显,但随着地球持续变暖,未来的挑战将更加严峻。

🛰️ 自1993年以来,全球海平面已经上升了超过10厘米(约4英寸),并且海平面上升的速度正在加快。卫星数据显示,海平面上升的速率在此期间已经翻了一番。

🧊 融冰是海平面上升的主要原因,占约三分之二。全球几乎所有山地冰川都在萎缩,格陵兰岛和南极洲的巨大冰盖也在融化,大量淡水涌入海洋。格陵兰冰盖在2003年至2019年间,每年流失约2000亿吨冰。

🌡️ 热膨胀是海平面上升的另一个重要因素。由于海洋吸收了人类活动产生的90%以上的热量,海水温度升高导致体积膨胀,从而加剧海平面上升。2024年,热膨胀对海平面上升的影响尤为显著,因为这一年是地球有记录以来最热的一年。

🌊 美国国家海洋和大气管理局(NOAA)等机构的报告预测,未来几十年内,美国沿海地区的海平面将上升约10英寸至1英尺。到本世纪末,海平面可能会上升数英尺。长期海平面上升的幅度取决于人类应对气候变化的选择。

Consequences, they say, collect in low places.

A new NASA analysis, using data collected from different specialized satellites, reports that sea levels rose more than expected in 2024. But as any earth scientist will emphasize, the data in any particular year isn't nearly as important as the long-term trend. And the agency's analysis shows that global sea levels have gone up over 10 centimeters, or about four inches, since 1993 when satellites started measuring ocean height, and this rate is increasing. (Overall, sea levels have risen some eight to nine inches since 1880.)

“Every year is a little bit different, but what’s clear is that the ocean continues to rise, and the rate of rise is getting faster and faster," Josh Willis, who researches sea level rise at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, said in a statement.

After reporting on sea level rise — which stokes increased flooding and storm damage while threatening coastal infrastructure from sewage plants to water supplies — over the past decade, the most common responses I receive on the topic (beyond the unprintable) are either essentially "that's barely any sea level rise" or "stop sensationalizing sea level rise." It's true that four inches of sea level rise over the last few decades may not be concerning or noticeable to some people. And just four inches itself, occurring in a temporal vacuum, doesn't spell a serious problem. The problem, however, is it's not stopping at four inches.

In a previous report authored by top researchers at a diversity of U.S. agencies — the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), NASA, the Department of Defense, and beyond — scientists project sea levels will rise by some 10 inches to a foot along the U.S. coast over just the next three decades. And again, it won't stop there, either. The U.S. could see several feet of sea level rise by the century's end. (Different longer-range sea level rise scenarios are shown later in this story.)

The new NASA graphic below shows the picture captured by satellites since 1993. Importantly, the rate of sea level rise increase has doubled over this period. Satellites, like the Sentinel-6/Michael Freilich spacecraft, use radar altimeters to observe sea level rise by beaming radio waves from space to the surface, which reflect off the ocean and return to the satellite.

Sea level rise as measured by earth-observing satellites since 1993. Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech

There are two main contributors to sea level rise. The largest contributor, at some two-thirds, is melting ice. Globally, nearly all mountain glaciers are shrinking, and much glacial water ultimately enters the ocean. What's more, the colossal ice stores on Greenland and Antarctica are melting enormous amounts of water into the sea. (The Greenland Ice Sheet, about three times the size of Texas, lost some 200 gigatons annually between 2003 and 2019. A gigaton equals 1 billion metric tonnes.) The second is thermal expansion: As the seas absorb more heat, they expand.

In 2024, however, thermal expansion played a larger role, which is little surprise as 2024 was Earth's hottest year on record (the seas absorb over 90 percent of the heat humans trap on Earth). This boosted sea level rise a bit above current annual expectations, to nearly a quarter inch. (Rising surface temperatures are part of another clear trend: The last 10 consecutive years have been the warmest 10 on record, NASA says.)

In the coming years, however, Earth's melting ice sheets will play an outsized role in sea level rise. "The ice sheets are just getting warmed up," NASA's Willis previously told Mashable.

"The ice sheets are just getting warmed up."

There is uncertainty about how much sea levels will rise by the century's end because humanity has never seen such human-caused melting before. How much water, for example, will Antarctica's destabilized, Florida-sized Thwaites Glacier dump into the oceans in the coming years? "Thwaites is the one spot in Antarctica that has the potential to dump an enormous amount of water into the ocean over the next decades," Sridhar Anandakrishnan, a professor of glaciology at Penn State University who researches Thwaites, told Mashable in 2021.

Four inches since 1993 is really just the beginning as Earth continues to warm.

The following five long-term (2050-2150) sea level rise scenarios, compiled by U.S. agencies in the comprehensive report cited above, cover a wide range of possibilities. The "low" scenario — involving an extremely ambitious climate target — requires global nations to stabilize Earth's warming at around 1.6 degrees Celsius (2.8 degrees Fahrenheit) above 19th-century temperature levels by mid-century. Compared to sea levels in 2000, the "Intermediate" scenario for the U.S. below, which projects 1.3 feet of sea level rise by 2050 and several feet by 2100, is a world warmed by around 2 degrees C (3.6 degrees F) by mid-century.

Five potential sea level rise scenarios for both the U.S. and the globe. Credit: NOAA 2022 Sea Level Rise Technical Report

Ultimately, the amount of sea level rise experienced by our descendants is up to the choices made by the most unpredictable part of the climate equationus.

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海平面上升 气候变化 NASA 融冰 热膨胀
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