Jay Lehr and Tom Harris
For the past 50 years, scientists have been studying
climate change and the possibility of related sea level changes resulting from
melting ice and warming oceans. Despite the common belief that increasing
levels of carbon dioxide (CO2) in our atmosphere could result in catastrophic
sea level rise, there is no evidence to support this fear. Tax monies spent
trying to solve this non-existent problem are a complete waste.
There is another widely held misconception: that all the
oceans of the world are at the same level. In reality, sea level
measurements around the world vary considerably, typically by several inches.
Prevailing winds and continental instability are among the variables that make
measurements difficult, but the varying results of rising sea levels are
extremely accurate.
The National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration
(NOAA) of the United States updated its coastal sea level tide gauge data in
2016 at the request of the previous administration. These measurements continue
to show no evidence of accelerating sea level rise.
The measurements include tide gauge data at coastal
locations along the West Coast, East Coast, Gulf Coast, Pacific Ocean, Atlantic
Ocean and Gulf of Mexico, as well as seven Pacific Island groups and six
Atlantic Island groups, comprising more than 200 measurement stations.
The longest running NOAA tide gauge record of coastal sea
level in the U.S. is in New York City at Battery Park. Its 160-year record
shows a steady sea level rise of 11 inches per century. A few miles away at
Kings Point, New York is a station whose 80-year record shows about the same.
Both locations show a steady, unchanging sea level rise
rate whether temperature has been rising or falling (see below figures).
Indeed, The Battery measurements showed the same rate of sea level rise well
before the existence of coal power plants and SUVs as today.
The 2016 updated
NOAA tide gauge record included data for California coastal locations at San
Diego, La Jolla, Los Angeles and San Francisco. The measured rates of sea level
rise at these locations vary between four inches and nine inches per century.
NOAA data provide assessments with a 95% confidence level at all measured
locations.
In contrast to
these steady but modest real-world rising sea level rates, the United Nations
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) claims that sea levels all
over the world will almost immediately begin rising far faster than before. Not
only do NOAA records contradict such claims for U.S. and selected island
coasts; this pattern of steady but modest sea level rise is being observed all
across the world, despite rising CO2 and fluctuating average global temperatures.
The IPCC and its
supporters are not able to provide convincing evidence to support their
concerns about dangerous warming-driven sea level rise, as rising temperatures
have rarely pushed sea level rise beyond one foot per century. Current sea
level rise trends have stayed essentially constant over the past 90 years,
despite the rise of atmospheric CO2 levels from less than 300 parts
per million (ppm) as the Little Ice Age ended and modern industrial era began,
to today’s 410 ppm.
Dire predictions
made decades ago of dramatically accelerating polar ice loss, and an ice-free
Arctic Ocean, have simply not come to pass. Dr. Steven E. Koonin, former
Undersecretary for Science in the Obama administration, noted in The Wall
Street Journal on September 19, 2014: “Even though the human influence on
climate was much smaller in the past, the models do not account for the fact
that the rate of global sea-level rise 70 years ago was as large as what we
observe today.”
We can test the
rising-seas hypothesis with real data collected from ten widely-distributed
coastal cities with long and reliable sea level records in addition to those
listed above. Those cities are indicated on the map below.
The Ceuta, Spain
data show a nearly flat trend. Most notably, the data show no correlation
between CO2 concentration and sea-level rise. If the current trend
continues for the next century, the sea level in Ceuta will rise only three
inches. This is in sharp contrast to the 10-foot global rise in sea levels
recently projected by former NASA scientist James Hansen.
Like some other
regions, Hawaii can see significant year-to-year fluctuations in sea level
because of global oceanic currents or local plate tectonic movements. However,
Honolulu has seen an average sea-level rise of only 5.6 inches since 1900.
The sea level around Honolulu is projected to rise a mere 5.6 inches in the
next 100 years, once again with no correlation to CO2 levels.
In contrast to
these other locations, the sea level trend in Sitka, Alaska has been downward,
not upward. If the rate of change continues, sea level will fall nine inches
over the next 100 years. Note that Sitka is only about 100 miles from Glacier
Bay and 200 miles from the Hubbard Glacier on Disenchantment Bay. If melting
glaciers were causing sea levels to rise, one would expect to see it in Alaska.
Of course, the Sitka anomaly could be due to rising land masses, as is the case in other parts of the world. Still other locations – such as the Norfolk, Virginia area – are prone to land subsidence, the result of groundwater withdrawals from subsurface rock formations and/or to isostatic changes in nearby areas that cause some land masses to rise while others fall in elevation.
Here is the forecast sea level rise over the next century for the remaining seven cities on the map:
Atlantic City, New Jersey - 16 inches
Port Isabel, Texas - 15.4 inches
St. Petersburg, Florida - 10.7 inches
Fernandina Beach, Florida - 8.3 inches
Mumbai/Bombay, India - 3.12 inches
Sydney, Australia - 2.7 inches
Slipshavn, Denmark - 3.6 inches.
The observational data and projected sea level trends for these ten coastal cities lead to three obvious conclusions:
Of course, the Sitka anomaly could be due to rising land masses, as is the case in other parts of the world. Still other locations – such as the Norfolk, Virginia area – are prone to land subsidence, the result of groundwater withdrawals from subsurface rock formations and/or to isostatic changes in nearby areas that cause some land masses to rise while others fall in elevation.
Here is the forecast sea level rise over the next century for the remaining seven cities on the map:
Atlantic City, New Jersey - 16 inches
Port Isabel, Texas - 15.4 inches
St. Petersburg, Florida - 10.7 inches
Fernandina Beach, Florida - 8.3 inches
Mumbai/Bombay, India - 3.12 inches
Sydney, Australia - 2.7 inches
Slipshavn, Denmark - 3.6 inches.
The observational data and projected sea level trends for these ten coastal cities lead to three obvious conclusions:
- There has been no dramatic sea level rise in the past century, and evidence-based projections show no significant or dangerous rise is likely to occur in the coming century.
- There is no evidence to indicate that the rate of sea level rise (or fall) in any of these areas will be substantially different than has been the case over the past decades or even century.
- There is no correlation between atmospheric CO2 concentrations and sea level rise. The steady but modest rise in sea level pre-dated coal power plants and SUVs, and has continued at the same pace even as atmospheric CO2 concentrations rose from 280 parts per million to 410 parts per million.
Claims about dangerously rising sea levels, and island nations being submerged by them – as a result of human fossil fuel use and manmade global warming – are nothing more than a clever ruse, designed to frighten people into demanding or accepting terrible energy policies.
Those policies would cause nations the world over to give up abundant, reliable, affordable coal, oil and natural gas … and replace these fuels with unreliable, weather-dependant, expensive wind, solar and biofuel energy. The results would be devastating – for economies, jobs, manufacturing, food production, poor families and the environment.
Dr. Jay Lehr is the Science Director of The Heartland Institute which is based in Arlington Heights, Illinois. Tom Harris is Executive Director of the Ottawa, Canada-based International Climate Science Coalition and is also a policy advisor to Heartland.
No comments:
Post a Comment