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Enhancing New York City's resilience to sea level rise and increased coastal floodingAccelerating Greenland and Antarctic Ice Sheet ice mass losses and potential West Antarctic Ice Sheet instability may lead to higher than previously anticipated future sea levels. The New York City Panel on Climate Change Antarctic Rapid Ice Melt (ARIM) upper-end, low probability sea level rise (SLR) scenario, which incorporates recent ice loss trends, improved ice sheet-ocean-atmosphere modeling, and potential ice sheet destabilization, projects SLR of up to 2.1 m by the 2080s and up to 2.9 m by 2100, at high greenhouse gas emissions (NPCC, 2019). These results exceed previous high-end SLR projections (90th percentile) of 1.5 m by the 2080s and 1.9 m by 2100, relative to 2000–2004 (NPCC, 2015).

By 2100, the 1% annual chance (100-year) floodplain could cover 1/3 of the city's total area under ARIM; around 1/5 of the area could be flooded during monthly high tides. Some low-lying locations could become permanently inundated by late century. Will New York City coastal resiliency initiatives, guided, in part by NPCC findings, suffice for very high sea levels? Additional research is needed to determine technological, environmental, or economic limitations to coastal protection and to decide when and where strategic relocation may become necessary.
Document ID
20205005519
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Vivien Gornitz
(SciSpace LLC)
Michael Oppenheimer
(Princeton University Princeton, New Jersey, United States)
Robert Kopp
(Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey New Brunswick, New Jersey, United States)
Radley Horton
(Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory Sparkill, New York, United States)
Philip Orton
(Stevens Institute of Technology Hoboken, New Jersey, United States)
Cynthia Rosenzweig
(Goddard Institute for Space Studies New York, New York, United States)
William Solecki
(Hunter College New York, New York, United States)
Lesley Patrick
(City University of New York New York, New York, United States)
Date Acquired
July 29, 2020
Publication Date
August 1, 2020
Publication Information
Publication: Urban Climate
Publisher: Elsevier
Volume: 33
Issue Publication Date: September 1, 2020
ISSN: 2212-0955
Subject Category
Meteorology And Climatology
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: 80NSSC17M0057
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNG17HP03C
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Use by or on behalf of the US Gov. Permitted.
Technical Review
External Peer Committee
Keywords
Sea level rise
Coastal flooding
Flood adaptation
Resilency planning
New York City
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