Satellite measurement of sea level rise is very accurate, but we have only had this technology for 20 years or so. Today’s sea level rise of 3.4 mm per year has not changed. The older data though, when evaluated with advanced statistical techniques, was not as much as had been previously assumed. This makes the current rate of sea level rise faster than was previously assumed. What this means si that model projections, like are summarized in the IPCC’s work, underestimate the future.

Tide gauges have been around since the 1700s and we have a lot of historical data to deal with from a lot of tide gauges. There are many variables in tide gauge measurement that can add uncertainty to the true amount of rise. Natural subsidence, where accumulated sediments naturally compact is one example. Something called isostatic rebound, where earth’s crust is still rebounding from the great weight of now melted ice sheets is another.

These errors have all been blamed for the poor confidence of past estimates of global sea level rise and with good reason. As time has slipped by, many of the variables have come under greater scrutiny and been refined to greater degrees of accuracy.

But there has remained a significant amount of uncertainty that has failed to pass the reality check for many, including the researchers involved in this work.

The sea level rise rate has been stable (or nearly so) since the beginning of the 20th century. Because the rate of warming during this period has accelerated, a stable sea level rise rate is counterintuitive. When advanced statistical techniques were thrown at the data, it was discovered that the rise rate of the sea level prior to the satellite record was over estimated.

The results of this work are that the current global sea level rise rate is accelerating at a rate that is nearly 50 percent greater than previously assumed.

Does this mean that sea level rise will actually be 50 percent more than the nearly 3 feet proposed by the IPCC for the rest of the century?

Well no. The rise will in reality likely be more than double the current estimates, but this is only for a plain and simple ice cube model. Abrupt changes to either the West Antarctic Ice Sheet or even the Greenland’s Ice Sheet toss the plain and simple ice cube model on its head.

A thing called dynamical ice sheet disintegration happened to the West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS) about 120,000 years ago when the temperature was as warm as it will be be in a few decades or less and sea level was about the same as today. The WAIS collapsed over a period of several centuries, but a sea level rise jump of 6 to 10 feet was documented at Xcaret Reef over a time span of 10 to 24 years (see here).

 

Hay, et al., Probabilistic reanalysis of twentieth century sea level rise, Nature, 14093, January 2015.
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v517/n7535/full/nature14093.html

West Antarctic Ice Sheet — Dynamical Ice Sheet Disintegration: Sea level rise of over 10 feet in 100 years… Blanchon, et al., Rapid sea level rise and reef back stepping at the close of the last interglacial highstand, Nature, April 2009. First Paragraph, page 884: “During those jumps, direct measurement of rise rates shows that they exceeded 36 mm per year.” (1.2 feet per decade)
https://www.academia.edu/196059/Rapid_sea-level_rise_and_reef_back-stepping_at_the_close_of_the_last_interglacial_highstand

Satellite measurement of sea level rise is very accurate, but we have only had this technology for 20 years or so. Today’s sea level rise of 3.4 mm per year has not changed. The older data though, when evaluated with advanced statistical techniques, was not as much as had been previously assumed. This makes the current rate of sea level rise faster than was previously assumed. What this means si that model projections, like are summarized in the IPCC’s work, underestimate the future.

Tide gauges have been around since the 1700s and we have a lot of historical data to deal with from a lot of tide gauges. There are many variables in tide gauge measurement that can add uncertainty to the true amount of rise. Natural subsidence, where accumulated sediments naturally compact is one example. Something called isostatic rebound, where earth’s crust is still rebounding from the great weight of now melted ice sheets is another.

These errors have all been blamed for the poor confidence of past estimates of global sea level rise and with good reason. As time has slipped by, many of the variables have come under greater scrutiny and been refined to greater degrees of accuracy.

But there has remained a significant amount of uncertainty that has failed to pass the reality check for many, including the researchers involved in this work.

The sea level rise rate has been stable (or nearly so) since the beginning of the 20th century. Because the rate of warming during this period has accelerated, a stable sea level rise rate is counterintuitive. When advanced statistical techniques were thrown at the data, it was discovered that the rise rate of the sea level prior to the satellite record was over estimated.

The results of this work are that the current global sea level rise rate is accelerating at a rate that is nearly 50 percent greater than previously assumed.

Does this mean that sea level rise will actually be 50 percent more than the nearly 3 feet proposed by the IPCC for the rest of the century?

Well no. The rise will in reality likely be more than double the current estimates, but this is only for a plain and simple ice cube model. Abrupt changes to either the West Antarctic Ice Sheet or even the Greenland’s Ice Sheet toss the plain and simple ice cube model on its head.

A thing called dynamical ice sheet disintegration happened to the West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS) about 120,000 years ago when the temperature was as warm as it will be be in a few decades or less and sea level was about the same as today. The WAIS collapsed over a period of several centuries, but a sea level rise jump of 6 to 10 feet was documented at Xcaret Reef over a time span of 10 to 24 years (see here).

 

Hay, et al., Probabilistic reanalysis of twentieth century sea level rise, Nature, 14093, January 2015.
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v517/n7535/full/nature14093.html

West Antarctic Ice Sheet — Dynamical Ice Sheet Disintegration: Sea level rise of over 10 feet in 100 years… Blanchon, et al., Rapid sea level rise and reef back stepping at the close of the last interglacial highstand, Nature, April 2009. First Paragraph, page 884: “During those jumps, direct measurement of rise rates shows that they exceeded 36 mm per year.” (1.2 feet per decade)
https://www.academia.edu/196059/Rapid_sea-level_rise_and_reef_back-stepping_at_the_close_of_the_last_interglacial_highstand

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