UN chief warns of 'rising tide of misery' from rising seas
UNITED NATIONS, United States — UN chief Antonio Guterres warned on Wednesday that surging sea levels are creating «a rising tide of misery,» as a coalition of small island nations declared that their sovereignty must be respected even if their lands are subsumed.
Nearly a billion people worldwide live in low-lying coastal areas, increasingly vulnerable to storm surges, coastal erosion and flooding — while Pacific islands face growing threats to their economic viability and even existence.
Since the beginning of the 20th century, the global mean sea level has risen faster than in any prior century over at least the past 3,000 years, a direct consequence of human-caused global warming triggering the melting of ice on land and the thermal expansion of seawater.
«Rising seas mean a rising tide of misery,» said Guterres, speaking at a summit that placed sea-level rise at the top of the international agenda at the UN General Assembly.
Over the past century, as global temperatures have risen about one degree Celsius (1.8F), sea levels have gone up 160 to 210 millimeters (6 to 8 inches) — with about half of that amount occurring since 1993, according to NASA.
According to a study cited by the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, five nations — the Maldives, Tuvalu, the Marshall Islands, Nauru and Kiribati — may become uninhabitable by 2100, creating 600,000 stateless climate refugees.
Guterres warned of «communities swamped, fresh water contaminated, crops ruined, infrastructure damaged, biodiversity destroyed and economies decimated — with sectors such as fisheries, agriculture and tourism pummeled.» These effects are already being felt, he said — pointing to hundreds of island families in Panama forced to relocate to the mainland, and people in Saint Louis, Senegal, who are abandoning their homes, schools, businesses and mosques to the encroaching tide.
AdvertisementFeleti Teo, prime minister of the tiny Pacific archipelago of Tuvalu, added that rising seas pose «an existential threat to our economies, to our culture and heritage, and to the land that nourished our ancestors for centuries.» Flooding has increased soil salinity, reducing crop yields and