Untuk Indonesia, peningkatan permukaan laut berarti makin banyak abrasi
pantai, hilangnya pulau, meningkatnya banjir terutama jika hutan makin habis
 sampah makin penuh di kali dan kali makin dangkal.

Good bye Indonesia hijau, subur makmur, tanah yang kaya.

KM



Oceans Warming And Rising 

By Julio Godoy 

24 December, 2006 

Inter Press Service 



Ocean levels will rise faster than expected if greenhouse gas emissions
continue to rise, a leading German researcher warns. 

Using data from the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration
(NASA), Stefan Rahmstorf, professor of physics of the oceans at the
University of Potsdam near Berlin estimates that sea level could rise 140 cm
by 2100. 



Rahmstorf, member of the German Advisory Council on Global Change, is
considered a leading European researcher on global warming and its effect on
oceans. 

"The semi-empirical model we used to process NASA data showed a proportional
constant sea level rise of 3.4 mm per year per degree Celsius," Rahmstorf
told IPS. "Then we applied this constant proportionality to future earth
surface warming scenarios of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
(IPPC), and came to estimate that by the year 2100, sea level could rise
between 50 and 140 cm above the level measured in 1990." 

Through the 20th century, global warming led to an average 20cm rise in sea
level. But most computer models of climate change used at present
significantly underestimate sea level rise, Rahmstorf said. "Future
projections of sea level based on these climate models are therefore
unreliable." 

Currently, sea level is rising at three cm per decade, faster than projected
in the scenarios of the IPCC Third Assessment Report, Rahmstorf added. 

The IPCC, an intergovernmental team of scientists carrying out a wide range
of research related to climate change, was established in 1988 by the World
Meteorological Organisation and the United Nations Environmental Programme.
The IPCC aims to assess scientific, technical and socio-economic information
relevant for understanding of climate change, its potential impact, and
options for adaptation and mitigation. 

Scientific research has found that industrial activities have produced
greenhouse gas emissions considerably higher than levels observed before the
industrial revolution. 

Concentration of carbon dioxide (CO2), the most potent of greenhouse gases,
has risen from about 280 parts per million (ppm) in the atmosphere in the
year 1750 to about 380 ppm today. 

This rise is primarily due to the burning of fossil fuels, and to a lesser
extent, deforestation. Scientists estimate that if the present emissions
trend continues, the atmosphere could heat up by about five 5 degrees
Celsius by 2100. 

Studies by the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research suggest that
this would roughly be the temperature difference between an ice age and a
warm stage. But while the rise of average temperatures by some five degrees
between the last great ice age and today took 5,000 years, the new global
warming would need only 100 years. 

Rahmstorf acknowledged that forecasts of global warming and its effects on
sea levels continue to be marked by uncertainty. "The fact that we get such
different estimates using different methods shows how uncertain our sea
level forecasts still are," Rahmstorf told IPS. 

A major reason for the uncertainty is the behaviour of the large ice sheets
in Greenland and Antarctica. 

A likely consequence of a massive melting of the ice masses on the North
Pole could be the breakdown of the North Atlantic Current (NAC). The NAC is
the northern extension of the Gulf Stream, and constitutes a warm water
current flowing between Britain and Iceland. This has considerable impact in
moderating the North European and Scandinavian climate. 

"One critical factor for the continuation of this current is the amount of
fresh water that enters the Northern Atlantic region in the future,"
Rahmstorf said. "This will depend in large part on the speed at which
Greenland's ice sheet melts." 

Rahmstorf, who earlier this year co-authored a research paper titled 'The
Future Oceans -- Warming Up, Rising High, Turning Sour' said that reliable
prediction on the risk of a total stoppage of deepwater formation in the
Northern Atlantic is not possible given present knowledge. 

But he pointed out that experts have evaluated that risk at more than 50
percent if global warming is between three and five degrees. 

Rahmstorf said greenhouse gases emissions are also increasing the acidity of
oceans. "In the atmosphere carbon dioxide does not react with other gases,
but in the ocean it dissolves, contributing to the acidification of seawater
" Rahmstorf said. This acidity is a serious threat to marine biodiversity. 

"There is a good chance to avoid such dangerous climate change if global
warming caused by human activities is limited to two degrees in the coming
decades," Rahmstorf said. 

(*This story is part of a series of features on sustainable development by
IPS - Inter Press Service and IFEJ - International Federation of
Environmental Journalists.)

Copyright © 2006 IPS-Inter Press Service

 

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