What about sea level?
14 hours ago Andy May
By Andy May
We’ve all heard the question. We point out there is no evidence that current climate changes, whether man-made or natural, are dangerous or unusual. Then we are asked, but “What about sea level rise? Isn’t that dangerous?” There are many very good technical arguments why the current rate of sea level rise will not threaten humans, New York City, Miami, or Tuvalu. These are urban legends that spawn from silly IPCC models as explained by Ole Humlum in Chapter 10 of our latest book (Crok & May, 2023). How are these myths dismissed quickly in clear language? This is my best attempt in ~600 words. Let me know how I did.
The current rate of global sea level rise is below the accuracy of our current ability to measure it as discussed in Kip Hansen’s Chapter 5 in Crok & May. Figure 1 shows three respected estimated rates. The sea levels are shown as reported and they have different zero points. The Jevrejeva, et al. estimate in blue is 2 mm/year (± ~0.3), the one below that is the Church and White estimate of 1.7 (± ~0.3) mm/year. These estimates are both from tide gauges, although the Jevrejeva estimate does try and include the satellite data from 1993 to 2009. Due to the overlap of the author’s estimates of uncertainty, the two estimates are statistically equivalent.
Figure 1. Three respected estimates of the rate of sea level rise in mm/year. Sources: (Jevrejeva, Moore, Grinsted, Matthews, & Spada, 2014), (Church & White, 2006), and (Beckley, Callahan, Hancock, Mitchum, & Ray, 2017). Jevrejeva, 2014 only discusses their reconstruction through 2009, so they do not include the sudden rise in 2010 shown in their dataset.
The lower estimate, shown in gray, uses all the NASA satellite data since 1993. It shows a rate of 3.3 mm/year (Beckley, Callahan, Hancock, Mitchum, & Ray, 2017). The satellite record is too short to be meaningful, we need at least 60 more years of data before we can derive a meaningful rate from satellites. The satellite data only covers the upward part of a ~60-year cycle or oscillation that began in 1991.
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