Climate Change: 1998
Publications
Author:
Nicholls, R.J. and Mimura, N.
Title: Regional issues raised by sea-level rise and
their policy implications.
Publication: Climate Research 11(1): 5-18,
1998.
© Inter-Research
Notes: Global sea
levels are rising and this change is expected to accelerate in the
coming century due to anthropogenic global warming. Any rise in
sea level promotes land loss, increased flooding and salinisation.
The impacts of and possible responses to sea-level rise vary at
the local and regional scale due to variation in local and
regional factors. Policy responses to the human-enhanced
greenhouse effect need to address these different dimensions of
climate change, including the regional scale. Based on global
reviews and analyses of relative vulnerability, four contrasting
regions are selected and examined in more detail using local and
national assessments. These regions are (1) Europe, (2) West
Africa, (3) South, South-East and East Asia and (4) the Pacific
Small Islands. Some potential impacts of sea-level rise are found
to have strong regional dimensions and regional cooperation to
foster mitigation approaches (to reduce greenhouse gas emissions
and, hence, the magnitude of climate change) and adaptive
solutions to climate change impacts would be beneficial. For
instance, in South, South-East and East Asia subsiding megacities
and questions about long-term deltaic management are common and
challenging issues. The debate on mitigation and stabilisation of
greenhouse forcing also requires information on regional impacts
of different emission pathways. These results will be provided by
integrated models, calibrated against national
assessments.
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