Sea-Level Rise Environmental Research Letters

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Sea level rises poses greater threat to billions

March 2016

http://www.aalto.fi/en/current/news/2016-03-07-002/


More of the earth’s population lives in areas close to the sea than previously reckoned, regions that would be directly impacted by

anticipated rising in sea levels as climate change continues, according to research from Aalto University in Espoo, Finland:


These people are the most vulnerable to the rise of the sea level as well as to the increased number of floods and intensified

storms. By using new increased resolution datasets, Aalto University researchers estimate that 1.9 billion inhabitants, or 28% of the

world’s total population, live closer than 100 km from the coast in areas less than 100 meters above the present sea level.


By 2050 the amount of people in that zone is predicted to increase to 2.4 billion, while population living lower than 5 meters

will reach 500 million people. Many of these people need to adapt their livelihoods to changing climate, say Assistant Professor Matti

Kummu from Aalto University.


The study found that while population and wealth concentrate by the sea, food must be grown further and further away from where

people live. Highlands and mountain areas are increasingly important from food production point of view, but also very vulnerable to

changes in climate.


Over the past century there has been a clear tendency that cropland and pasture areas have grown most in areas outside the

population hotspots, and decreased in coastal areas. This will most probably only continue in the future, summarises Professor Olli Varis

from Aalto University.


Even though people and wealth continue to accumulate in coastal proximity, their growth is even faster in inland and mountainous

areas, the study reveals. This contradicts the existing studies. In the future, the world will be less diverse in terms of urbanisation

and economic output, when assessing it from geospatial point of view.


For the analysis, researchers used several global gridded datasets. They first created a geographic zoning in relation to the

elevation and proximity to coast. This was then used to study the factors included in the study, which were grouped into five clusters:

climate, population, agriculture, economy, and impact on environment. For the factors with temporal extent, the researchers also assessed

their development over time period of 1900-2050.


The study was made in collaboration with researchers from Aalto University, Finland, the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Netherlands,

National Institute for Statistics, Italy, and University of Zurich, Switzerland.


Here’s the basis for their findings, a global mapping based on Altitude and Distance to the Sea [ALDIS] zones:


Overview of the geographic zones.

  • (A) The ALDIS zoning and the share of the global land surface area in each zone (note the logarithmic

scale on both axes);

  • (B) definition of ALDIS zones and meta-zones; and
  • (C) map of the ALDIS zones (colours correspond to the ones in (A)-tile).


Overview of the geographic zones.

  • (A) The ALDIS zoning and the share of the global land surface area in each zone (note the logarithmic

scale on both axes);

  • (B) definition of ALDIS zones and meta-zones; and
  • (C) map of the ALDIS zones (colours correspond to the ones in (A)-tile).


The full report has been published as a rare open [free] access article by Environmental Research Letters.


http://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1748-9326/11/3/034010/meta;jsessionid=4BD4C7C4B3FE79B39DA468435543D03C.c1.iopscience.cld.iop.org