Friday, February 15, 2013

Sea level rose 60 percent faster than UN projections, study finds | Redux

Sea level rose 60 percent faster than UN projections, study finds

Limits of growth
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A recent study published in the journal "Nature" suggests the U.S. may experience a 5-foot rise in sea level given all of the fossil fuel that has already been burned. NBC's Anne Thompson reports. By Miguel Llanos, NBC NewsProjections for sea level rise in coming decades could be too conservative, experts warned Wednesday, saying they found that the rise over the last two decades is much more than predicted by the U.N. scientific body tracking climate signals. Follow @NBCNewsWorld In a peer-reviewed study, the experts said satellite data show sea levels rose by 3.2 millimeters (0.1 inch) a year from 1993 to 2011 — 60 percent faster than the 2 mm annual rise projected by the U.N.'s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change for that period.  "This suggests that IPCC sea-level projections for the future may also be biased low," the team wrote in the journal Environmental Research Letters.

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Anne Thompson

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PrintMedia: Nature

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PrintMedia: Environmental Research Letters

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Organization: U.N.

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