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| Nicola Jones. |
The planet’s polar ice is melting fast, and recent satellite
data, models, and fieldwork have left scientists sobered by the speed of the
sea level rise we should expect over the coming decades. Although researchers
have long projected that the planet’s biggest ice sheets and glaciers will wilt
in the face of rising temperatures, estimates of the rate of that change keep
going up. When the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) put out its
last report in 2013, the consensus was for under a meter (3.3 feet) of sea
level rise by 2100. In just the last few years, at least one modeling study
suggests we might need to double that.
Read the environment360
story by Nicola Jones - “Abrupt Sea Level Rise Looms As Increasingly Realistic Threat.”

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