Not exact matches
Dr Svetlana Jevrejeva from the NOC, who is the lead author on this paper, said «Coastal cities and vulnerable tropical coastal ecosystems will have very little time to adapt to the fast
sea level rise these
predictions show, in scenarios with global warming above two degree.
Current
sea level rise underestimated: Satellites
show recent global average
sea level rise (3.4 millimeters per year over the past 15 years) to be around 80 percent above past I.P.C.C.
predictions.
Rising
sea levels that
show little to no acceleration, in sharp contrast to
predictions.
1)
Show us the past literature where clear discernible, unambiguous
predictions about the trajectory of all important climate variables such as «global temperature», «global
sea level», «global rain fall», «global severe weather events» and other key «global climate» parameters were made.
Global
sea level data
shows that
sea level rise has been increasing since 1880 while future
sea level rise
predictions are based on physics, not statistics.
Satellite and tide - gauge measurements
show that
sea level rise is accelerating faster than IPCC
predictions.