The University of Colorado's
Sea Level Research Group decided in May to add 0.3 millimeters — or about the thickness of a fingernail — every year to its actual measurements of sea levels, sparking criticism from experts who called it an attempt to exaggerate the effects of global warming.
The University of Colorado
Sea Level Research Group updated their data in July, but oddly enough the new data was only available through mid-April.
Some of the ideas are mere suggestions and others are based on the information that
the Sea Level Research Group (SLRG) has put out on their website.
Not exact matches
Research group Climate Central has created a plug - in for Google Earth that illustrates how catastrophic an «extreme»
sea -
level rise scenario would be if the flooding happened now, based on projections in a 2017 report from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Agency (NOAA).
The latest report from the International Panel on Climate Change, an intergovernmental
group charged with
researching the effects of carbon emissions, said at the end of September that climate change is unequivocal and that going forward,
sea levels will rise at a faster rate than they have over the past 40 years.
In permanently installed benthocosms, a
research group investigates responses of bottom - dwelling communities of the Baltic and North
Sea when exposed to future temperature and carbon dioxide
levels.
«In an op - ed piece in the December 11 issue of NRC / Handelsblad, Wilco Hazeleger, a senior scientist in the global climate
research group at KNMI, writes: «In the past century the
sea level has risen twenty centimeters.
In our
research group the «semi-empirical method» was developed to estimate future
sea level rise following from a specified global warming scenario.
Sea - level projections by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), by our research group and by others indicate that global average sea level at the end of the century would likely be about 1 - 2.5 feet higher under the Paris path than in 20
Sea -
level projections by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), by our
research group and by others indicate that global average
sea level at the end of the century would likely be about 1 - 2.5 feet higher under the Paris path than in 20
sea level at the end of the century would likely be about 1 - 2.5 feet higher under the Paris path than in 2000.
«No evidence for accelerated
sea -
level rise» says Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute — December 12, 2008 Excerpt: In an op - ed piece in the December 11 issue of NRC / Handelsblad, Wilco Hazeleger, a senior scientist in the global climate
research group at KNMI, writes: «In the past century the
sea level has risen twenty centimeters.
Excerpt: In an op - ed piece in the December 11 issue of NRC / Handelsblad, Wilco Hazeleger, a senior scientist in the global climate
research group at KNMI, writes: «In the past century the
sea level has risen twenty centimeters.
Steve Nerem, the director of the widely relied - upon
research center, told FoxNews.com that his
group added the 0.3 millimeters per year to the actual
sea level measurements because land masses, still rebounding from the ice age, are rising and increasing the amount of water that oceans can hold.