Posts Tagged ‘Sea Levels’

Chesapeake Bay Area Battling Sea Level Rise

Friday, October 30th, 2009

I just wrote a blog about the Maldives’ underwater meeting to bring attention to sea level rise due to global warming. I then read an article about the U.S. Chesapeake Bay area that has been suffering sea level rise for quite a while and it’s getting worse. This news hasn’t made mainstream TV much because beach areas typically rely upon tourism. Officials of towns with beaches affected by sea level rise don’t want anyone to know the amount of sand they haul in annually to replenish what is rapidly disappearing. So beaches near resorts and hotels don’t belie how bad the situation there really is.

The article titled “Slip Sliding Away,” by David Fahrenthold was in National Wildlife Federation’s Oct/Nov Issue. It claims that many beaches are now bulkheads built to stave off rising sea levels. Sea levels that are “rising almost twice as fast in the Chesapeake region as in most of the world.” This area finds its communities spending millions to keep water from eroding more sand, and shipping sand in from elsewhere to maintain a beach area at all.

It was explained that two natural phenomena are affecting Chesapeake Bay and the mid Atlantic shore line. The land is dropping in the already low-lying Chesapeake Bay. This sinking is a result of huge glaciers melting in the north. Large glaciers put so much weight on the earth’s crust at one point it causes land to rise at the opposite end, “like a seesaw.” Melting Arctic glaciers are lightening the load so the Chesapeake area suffers from sinking. It happened in the first Ice Age. The other phenomenon is that climate change affects ocean currents. Chesapeake Bay is witnessing a weakened system of currents that pulls water away from the shore.

This presents a double whammy to the whole mid Atlantic area. I couldn’t believe the cost of replacing beaches and battling erosion. Virginia Beach reportedly spent $7 million in 2006 to “deposit 100,000 dump truck’s worth of sand on its beach. With Chesapeake Bay covering approx. 65,000 sq. miles, and being the U.S. largest and most biologically diverse estuary there is a lot at stake.

And like the Maldivians were trying to get across to everyone with their underwater town meeting is that places like the Maldives and Kiribati are only precursors of what will continue to happen along more and more coastlines. Add the Chesapeake Bay and mid Atlantic to the early list and disregard the skeptics that say it ain’t so.

Read more about sea level rise in the Chesapeake Bay: http://www.nwf.org/sealevelrise/chesapeake.cfm

About changing ocean currents: http://www.piscoweb.org/research/science-by-discipline/coastal-oceanography/ocean-currents.

As Sea Levels Rise Maldives Officials Hold Underwater Meeting to Expose Threat

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

Contrary to what most skeptics say, there are island nations that know all too well that the sea is encroaching on them. The Maldives an island nation of nearly 1200 islands in the Indian Ocean, and home to almost 386,000 people is the lowest lying nation on earth averaging a mere 7 feet above sea level.
http://www.nationmaster.com/country/mv-maldives.

Well, the Maldivians are worried, so much so that officials there held an underwater meeting to bring attention to the crisis island/atoll nations face. Fears are the Maldives will be completely submerged by the end of the century. They also wanted to make the rest of the world realize that they are a “frontline state,” meaning the first but not the last to be affected by rising waters.

I wrote a blog in 2007 about the Kiribati Islands, another island nation nearby the Solomons, that is losing landmass at an alarming rate. The population there is about 100,000. The Kiribati official there thinks his island nation will cease to exist by 2050. http://www.blogsmonroe.com/world/2007/04/the-rest-of-the-world-is-going-green-fast/.

Now consider that between these two small island/atoll nations that very few of us could even locate without looking it all up first (me), there are almost a half a million people that will not just be homeless for the time being, until a war is settled, or someone decent comes into power, but literally without a country. Will the Maldivians change their names? After all there will be no Maldives to show where they come from. The lost city of Atlantis appears a little less incredulous now.

And don’t these experiences from actual people, a great many of them, fly in the face of reports by skeptics like the SPPI website that stated in their July 09, press release: “Sea level rose just 8 inches in the 20th century and has been rising at just 1 ft/century since 1993. Sea level has scarcely risen since 2006. Also, Pacific atolls are not being drowned by the sea, as some have suggested.” Hmm. Maybe they should take a little trip, see elsewhere.
http://scienceandpublicpolicy.org/press/global_warming_not_catastrophic.html.

Read the articles about the underwater meeting and Maldives concerns:

http://www.linktv.org/about/blog/post/305/underwater-activism-maldivian-officials-hold-meeting-under-the-sea.

http://gulfnews.com/news/world/other-world/maldives-officials-hold-underwater-meeting-to-highlight-threat-of-global-warming-1.515739.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/33354627/ns/world_news-weird_news/.