A large Iceberg floats away as the sun sets near Kulusuk, Greenland, on Aug. 15, 2019. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) in 2013 gave a central forecast that if global warming continued, sea levels would rise 60 centimetres by 2100, putting 360 million people at risk of annual coastal flooding. The latest study however shows that Greenland's faster-than-expected ice losses are in line with the IPCC's higher-end climate warming scenario which adds seven centimetres to that figure. "As a rule of thumb, for every centimetre rise in global sea level another six million people are exposed to coastal flooding around the planet," said co-author Professor Andrew Shepherd of Leeds University in the UK. "On current trends, Greenland ice melting (alone) will cause 100 million people to be flooded each year by the end of the century, so 400 million in total due to all sea level rise," Shepherd said. "These are not unlikely events or small impacts; they are happening and will be devastating for coastal communities," he added.
AP