Recent news on climate change has focused on the just released international report detailing major, near term threats from rising global temperatures. One critical impact, sea-level rise, could reshape the entire planet, and soon.
Speaking to graduate students at Bard College, Dr. Richard Alley, a leading specialist in Antarctic glacier dynamics, recently confirmed that sea levels could rise by 15-20 feet “by the time you students are old.” See the prediction explored and explained in the short video clip below.
Alley emphasizes that focusing on the UN’s “best estimate” of 3 feet of sea-level rise by 2100" is highly misleading. He says: “it could be 2, it could be 15 or 20.” Some of the uncertainty in the estimate depends upon the behavior of the towering Antarctic ice cliffs, hundreds of feet high, that are exposed when the surrounding sea ice melts. Alley and his colleagues study how fast these cliffs are likely to collapse.
To get an idea of what 9 feet of sea level rise looks like, the Weather Channel has produced this visualization. Climate change could double that level—permanently, all around the world— by the end of the century.
Dr. Richard Alley is the Evan Pugh Professor of Geosciences and an Associate of the Earth and Environmental Systems Institute at Penn State University, and among other accomplishments, was Chair of the National Research Council's panel on abrupt climate change.
The complete recording from this seminar can be found here.
Alley was speaking as part of the National Climate Seminar, hosted monthly by the Bard Center for Environmental Policy.
The National Climate Seminar is a monthly, lunchtime webinar focused on environmental education. It features climate scientists, political leaders, and policy analysts, each exploring the politics and science driving critical climate change decisions.
If you are interested in exploring the science and evidence of climate change, join us each month at noon eastern for a chance to connect with experts on climate and clean energy solutions.