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Human Water Use Accounts For 42% of Recent Sea Level Rise

scibri writes "During the latter half of the twentieth century, global sea level rose by about 1.8 millimeters per year. The combined contribution from heating of the oceans, which makes the water expand, along with melting of ice caps and glaciers, is estimated to be 1.1 millimeters per year, which left some 0.7 millimeters per year unaccounted for. It seems that the effects of human water use on land could fill that gap. Researchers report in Nature Geoscience that land-based water storage could account for 0.77 millimeters per year, or 42%, of the observed sea-level rise between 1961 and 2003. The extraction of groundwater for irrigation and home and industrial use, with subsequent run-off to rivers and eventually to the oceans, represents the bulk of the contribution. It would be even worse if we weren't also locking up lots of water from rivers behind dams like the Hoover Dam."

21 of 324 comments (clear)

  1. Really? by Dmritard96 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "It would be even worse if we weren't also locking up lots of water from rivers behind dams like the Hoover Dam." - Isn't the rate at which it leaves the lake the same as if the dam hadn't been there (with maybe the exception of evaporation...), just with a delay? My understanding was that dams affect latency but not throughput...

    1. Re:Really? by rickb928 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Depends on your location and context...

      --
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  2. sea levels rising for thousands of years by rubycodez · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The sea levels have been rising since the last ice age, and for much of that time much faster than now. The volume of the ocean changes for many reasons. Those lands that are essentially at sea level are doomed anyway, no point in the sob stories of displaced natives as their land would be covered even without any alleged actions by man, if not now then in next few centuries. Better they move now before their population grows even bigger and more people are affected.

    1. Re:sea levels rising for thousands of years by Penguinisto · · Score: 4, Insightful

      re. Outer Banks: I don't think you'd lose their buffer characteristics overnight; you'd have to wait until they were under something like 30' of ocean. They're still there and able to temper/stop any storm surge from hurricanes.

      re. aquifers: why would you want to pump it anywhere? You fill the aquifer with the water that is still uphill by damming it up while it's up there - it's less energy-intensive that way. Problem is (if Oregon is any indication), building a dam is politically impossible these days.

      re: ground water: A big problem is that some aquifers (e.g. the Ogallala) span multiple states. Who gets to pay for, manage, and regulate that?

      One more bit: In most of the Western US, water is a very touchy subject. Water rights and ownership is separate from property and mineral rights (e.g. you can often own the dirt, but not the water to be found in, under, or on it). Except for parts of Oregon and Washington, you will find water rights, ownership, and laws to be a byzantine and brain-hurting mess to sort through. That it works at all without physical violence breaking out is a miracle.

      --
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  3. I don't buy it by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 4, Funny

    This is obviously just another cry of "the sky is falling" from a bunch of alarmists pushing their anti-freedom agenda.

    There's no credible evidence that this so-called "ground water" exists at all. Look down at your feet: The ground is made out of dirt. How do they supposedly turn all this dirt into water? Answer: They can't. Dirt is black, water is clear. You don't get one from the other. It's just common sense, people.

    There's nothing to see here. Move along.

  4. Re:Worse? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Except no one looks back at the 20th century and remembers the great sea level disaster. The sea rose 7" over the 20th century, with zero acceleration in rate until the satellites came online, and no one noticed for 90 years. (Which obviously proves satellites cause sea level rise. )

    If you continue to just use the geologically stable tide gauges (as was used before satellite data became available) the rate of sea level change hasn't changed in 100 years.

  5. Re:Worse? by Chrisq · · Score: 4, Funny

    The sea rose 7" over the 20th century, with zero acceleration in rate until the satellites came online, and no one noticed for 90 years. (Which obviously proves satellites cause sea level rise. )

    So the Chinese are the good guys for blowing up satellites after all.

  6. Re:Dam Baby, Dam! by dkleinsc · · Score: 4, Funny

    ... time to put those beavers to work!

    Must ... resist ... obvious ... joke

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  7. Anyone else confused? by Anubis+IV · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...by this comment at the end of the summary?

    It would be even worse if we weren't also locking up lots of water from rivers behind dams like the Hoover Dam.

    I don't see why this matters much. If you released all of the dammed water, you'd have a one-time increase in ocean levels. So what? Dams control rivers, sure, but those rivers are still flowing and have been this entire time. Surely the throughput from that river over a relatively short period of time is far more significant than any amount of water dammed along that river.

    To me, that statement is as silly as, "We'd have even more cars on the road if we weren't locking some of them up at red lights and intersections."

  8. Re:Worse? by BMOC · · Score: 5, Informative

    Coral Atolls cannot suffer from sea level rise, they are the result of life living near the surface creating a deposit that itself builds the atoll. The Maldives will never suffer from gradual sea level rise. Charles Darwin himself discovered how Atolls remain above water. If these islands were bedrock, you might be right, but they're not. Atolls are essentially floating islands.

    http://www.pacificdisaster.net/pdnadmin/data/original/The_dynamic_response.pdf

    Results show that 86% of islands remained stable (43%) or increased in area (43%) over the timeframe of analysis. Largest decadal rates of increase in island area range between 0.1 to 5.6 hectares. Only 14% of study islands exhibited a net reduction in island area.

    Despite small net changes in area, islands exhibited larger gross changes. This was expressed as changes in the planform configuration and position of islands on reef platforms. Modes of island change included: ocean shoreline displacement toward the lagoon; lagoon shoreline progradation; and, extension of the ends of elongate islands. Collectively these adjustments represent net lagoonward migration of islands in 65% of cases.

    Results contradict existing paradigms of island response and have significant implications for the consideration of island stability under ongoing sea level rise in the central Pacific.

    First, islands are geomorphologically persistent features on atoll reef platforms and can increase in island area despite sea level change....

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  9. Re:Hoover dam by blueg3 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The oceans are also much deeper than a few millimeters. Total volume isn't really meaningful here.

    One millimeter across the world's oceans is about 350 cubic kilometers. So if the contents of the Hoover Dam flowed to the ocean, they would (ostensibly) raise the sea level by ~0.1 mm.

  10. How? by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It would be even worse if we weren't also locking up lots of water from rivers behind dams like the Hoover Dam.

    How would that be? Dams don't make the water go away. Over time, the amount of water going into the reservoir equals the amount leaving, or else the water levels would either drop or overflow the dam. The only significant change I'd see is that dams increase the surface area of the water and would therefore raise evaporation, so some of the water that would normally go downstream would turn into atmospheric moisture instead. For global warming purposes, that's probably not a good thing. But would it actually have a non-negligible effect on ocean levels?

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  11. Re:Since the ice age? by The+Mighty+Buzzard · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'm pretty sure he was saying that it always continues warming from one ice age until we hit the next. Whether we melt all the ice a hundred years sooner is unimportant in both the short and long term. In the medium term you have a bunch of people pissing and moaning because they got stuck with the changing real estate rather than their great-grandkids.

    The ice is going to melt. We are going to have another ice age. There's not a damned thing anyone can do about it and it's probably not going to happen in my lifetime, so why should I give a fuck?

    --
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  12. Re:Worse? by Dewin · · Score: 5, Funny

    (Which obviously proves satellites cause sea level rise. )

    Well, there is one particular satellite that has been well known to cause sea levels to rise quite significantly, so I think you might be on to something here...

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  13. Re:Worse? by Baloroth · · Score: 4, Funny

    Well, there is one particular satellite that has been well known to cause sea levels to rise quite significantly, so I think you might be on to something here...

    Well, yes, but not globally.

    --
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  14. sea level rise has been a lie/scam anyway. by argStyopa · · Score: 4, Informative

    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/columnists/christopherbooker/5067351/Rise-of-sea-levels-is-the-greatest-lie-ever-told.html

    But if there is one scientist who knows more about sea levels than anyone else in the world it is the Swedish geologist and physicist Nils-Axel MÃrner, formerly chairman of the INQUA International Commission on Sea Level Change. And the uncompromising verdict of Dr MÃrner, who for 35 years has been using every known scientific method to study sea levels all over the globe, is that all this talk about the sea rising is nothing but a colossal scare story.
    Despite fluctuations down as well as up, "the sea is not rising," he says. "It hasn't risen in 50 years." If there is any rise this century it will "not be more than 10cm (four inches), with an uncertainty of plus or minus 10cm". And quite apart from examining the hard evidence, he says, the elementary laws of physics (latent heat needed to melt ice) tell us that the apocalypse conjured up by
    Al Gore and Co could not possibly come about. ...
    When running the International Commission on Sea Level Change, he launched a special project on the Maldives, whose leaders have for 20 years been calling for vast sums of international aid to stave off disaster. Six times he and his expert team visited the islands, to confirm that the sea has not risen for half a century. Before announcing his findings, he offered to show the inhabitants a film explaining why they had nothing to worry about. The government refused to let it be shown.

    But hey, we all know that "there is 100% consensus among the serious scientists on AGW", right?

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    -Styopa
    1. Re:sea level rise has been a lie/scam anyway. by Overzeetop · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "Despite fluctuations down as well as up, "the sea is not rising," he says. "It hasn't risen in 50 years." If there is any rise this century it will "not be more than 10cm (four inches), with an uncertainty of plus or minus 10cm".

      So...he's basically saying that he has a mean rise somewhere just shy of 10cm, and an uncertainty of 10cm. That would, to a simple engineer like myself, suggest that sea levels ARE rising, and that they are rising at a rate which is somewhere between a negligible amount and 20cm over 100 years, or (wait for it) 2mm per year. TFS suggests that 1.8mm/yr is the annual average amount for the last fifty years. Presuming that there was no change - or a negligible one - from 1910-1960, that would average out to 0.9mm.yr.

      That's 9cm in 100 years or 10% less than Dr MÃrner's "not more than" mean, and well within his +/- 10cm. band.

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    2. Re:sea level rise has been a lie/scam anyway. by ath1901 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Mörner is not one of the serious scientists. I thought I recognized his name and looked him up at wikipedia. One of his previous achievements is winning the "Deceiver of the year" award for supporting dowsing.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nils-Axel_M%C3%B6rner#Views_on_dowsing

      Oh, and his claims about the sea level is not supported by satellite measurements.

  15. Re:Worse? by phantomfive · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You aren't very polite, and you aren't good at doing basic research. If you'd spent five minutes on Google, you might have found this, which shows a change in the coastline of more than .5 meters over the last 146 years.

    If you can't tell what continental drift and erosion has to do with sea-level rise, I don't know what to tell you. Continental drift means some coasts are growing an order of magnitude larger than the sea change. In other places, it is shrinking many times faster than sea level change.

    Thus we see, for people who live on the coast, sea level rise of 1.8mm is a laughably small problem, when compared to the many other things they are facing.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  16. Re:Worse? by hey! · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Except no one looks back at the 20th century and remembers the great sea level disaster.

    Ever hear of Venice? Of course Venice is also subsiding, but seven inches on top of that has made a big difference to them.

    The problem with sea level rise in the short term isn't that suddenly you're city is drowned every day of the year. It's with the increase in frequency with which rare catastrophic events occur. Every coastal city has a high water level below which flooding effects are marginal and above which they are catastrophic (e.g. a levee is overtopped). How close waters commonly come to that mark determines the impact of a marginal increase in sea level.

    Cities like Venice or New Orleans which are already prone to flooding are certainly affected by an 18 cm rise in mean sea level, although that effect isn't necessarily seen every year. Boston on the other hand was built to withstand 3-4m tides and has never had a major flood from the sea, so the 18 cm rise in the 20th C. had zero effect on it. If at some point in the future sea levels rise by a meter or so, flooding might become a common event in Boston. At that point a further 18 a cm rise would be very expensive to deal with.

    The effect of sea level rise is not linear, and it's not uniform throughout the world. The effect depends on how a city is constructed and situated.

    Now as to "geologically stable tide guages", if you knew anything about surveying you'd know that rather begs the question. In any case you can get any result you want by arbitrarily throwing out data; *mocking* data you'd prefer not to exist doesn't count as an argument.

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  17. Re:Worse? by riverat1 · · Score: 4, Informative

    An acre-foot of water is one acre of area covered by a foot of water. It is a common unit in the United States for measuring large volumes of water. One acre-foot is equal to 1233.48184 cubic meters or 325851.4 US gallons. Hogsheads vary is size but if you take it to be 63 gallons then an acre-foot is about 5,172 hogsheads. Troy ounces is a measure of mass, not volume.