When UN climate negotiators meet for summit talks this month, there will be a new figure on the table: 3°C.
Until now, global efforts such as the Paris climate agreement have tried to limit global warming to 2°C above pre-industrial levels.
However, with latest projections pointing to an increase of 3.2°C by 2100, these goals seem to be slipping out of reach.
Illustration: Mountain People
“[We] still find ourselves in a situation where we are not doing nearly enough to save hundreds of millions of people from a miserable future,” UN Environment Programme executive director Erik Solheim said ahead of the Bonn Climate Change Conference [which opened on Monday].
One of the biggest resulting threats to cities around the world is sea-level rise, caused by the expansion of water at higher temperatures and melting ice sheets on the north and south poles.
Scientists at the non-profit organization Climate Central estimate that 275 million people worldwide live in areas that would eventually be flooded at 3°C of global warming.
The regional impact of these changes is highly uneven, with four out of five people affected living in Asia.
Although sea levels are not likely to rise instantaneously, the calculated increases would be “locked in” at a temperature rise of 3°C, meaning they would be irreversible even if warming eventually slows down.
OSAKA, JAPAN
5.2 million people affected
At the end of a month in which it has been battered by unseasonably late typhoons and relentless rain, Japan is already confronting the threat posed by climate change-induced flooding.
Image modeling shows that swaths of Osaka — the commercial heart of a region whose GDP is almost as big as that of the Netherlands — would disappear beneath the water in a 3°C world, threatening the local economy and almost one-third of the wider region’s 19 million residents.
As a result of global sea-level rise, storm surges and other factors, economists project that coastal flooding could put almost US$1 trillion of Osaka’s assets at risk by the 2070s, the Union of Concerned Scientists said.
“The costs of protecting cities from rising sea levels and storms are also likely to rise — as are the costs of repairing storm damage,” it said. “Decisions we make today could have a profound impact on the security and culture of the people of this ancient city.”
Like much of Japan, Osaka already has a network of seawalls and other coastal defenses in place to combat tsunami — although their effectiveness was disputed in the aftermath of the 2011 triple disaster.
Osaka city authorities are investing in other infrastructure to mitigate the effects of flooding, but public education is also vital, the Osaka City Environment Bureau’s Toshikazu Nakaaki said.
“In the past our response was focused on reducing the causes of global warming, but given that climate change is inevitable, according to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change [IPCC], we are now discussing how to respond to the natural disasters that will follow,” Nakaaki said. “We anticipate that Osaka will be affected by natural disasters caused by climate change, but we have yet to establish exactly what might happen or how much financial damage they would cause.”
“It’s not that we expect sea levels to rise at some point in the future — they are already rising,” Nakaaki said.
Keiko Kanai has long been aware that her home city is susceptible to natural disasters.
“I’d heard that historically, tsunamis caused by earthquakes put many parts of Osaka underwater and I knew that some parts of the world were at risk from rising sea levels,” said Kanai, who teaches at a local university. “But I didn’t put two and two together. Until now I haven’t given much thought to the idea that Osaka too could be engulfed by rising sea levels.”
Nursing care consultant Kaori Akazawa said flooding was a consideration when she was deciding where in Osaka to live.
“When I moved here I talked to my colleagues about the risks,” she said. “That’s why I’ve always rented apartments on the fourth story or higher. It’s worrying, but I’ve never considered moving.”
Justin McCurry in Tokyo
ALEXANDRIA, EGYPT
3 million people affected
On the Alexandria Corniche, waves slowly lap at a shoreline dotted with plastic chairs and umbrellas from the beachside cafes. Students perch on the steps of the imposing Alexandria library.
However, the same coastline that draws locals to its scenic vistas is threatening to slowly engulf the historic city as sea levels rise due to global warming.
The IPCC reported that Alexandria’s beaches would be submerged even with a 0.5m sea-level rise, while 8 million people would be displaced by flooding in Alexandria and the Nile Delta if no protective measures are taken.
A 3°C world threatens far greater damage than that.
Yet, for many residents, there is little public information to connect the increasingly chaotic weather and floods with climate change.
“The vast majority of Alexandrians don’t have access to knowledge and that’s what worries me. I don’t expect the government to raise awareness of this problem until it’s already happening,” 22-year-old student Kareem Mohammed said.
“Everyone thinks we should act on this problem 50 or 80 years from now,” said his friend, Hazem Hassan, a student in marine biology at Alexandria University.
Officials maintain that protective measures are being taken, but with little fanfare.
“Egypt spends 700 million Egyptian pounds [US$39.7 million] annually to protect the north coast,” said Arab Environmental Experts Union secretary-general Magdy Allam, who was previously part of the Egyptian Ministry of Environment.
Allam cited the Mohamed Ali sea wall built in 1830 as a key protection, as well as the concrete blocks lining the shoreline designed to “detour flood water away from residential neighborhoods.”
However, critics said that this is far from enough given the scale of the problem.
“There are studies indicating that our city is one of many coastal human settlements around the world which will be partially submerged by 2070 if nothing is done,” said Ahmed Hassan of the Save Alexandria Initiative, a group that works to raise awareness of the effects of climate change on the city.
Ruth Michaelson in Alexandria
RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL
1.8 million people affected
Residents of Brazil’s postcard city have plenty of reasons to fear global warming — even if they don’t quite know it.
According to Climate Central, a temperature rise of 3°C would cause flooding of not just Rio’s famous beaches such as Copacabana and its waterfront domestic airport, but also inland areas of the Barra de Tijuca neighborhood, where last year’s Olympic Games were held.
Barra is built around a network of heavily polluted lagoons that empty into the sea. The prospect of it being underwater alarmed resident Sueli Goncalves, 46, who runs pensioners’ health projects, as she and her 23-year-old son, Yuri Sanchez, carried their shopping past the Olympic Park.
“My God. Oh Jesus,” she said, with a nervous laugh. “I will leave here. I will go to the United States. To Canada.”
The family knew about global warming, but were unaware of the potential scale of the impact on their upscale neighborhood of smart condominiums and a shopping mall.
“Nobody takes it seriously. People do not think long term,” Goncalves said.
Storm surges recently destroyed hundreds of meters of beachfront pavement overlooking the Macumba beach, a popular surfing spot on Rio’s western fringes.
Last year, heavy waves in another storm surge felled an elevated, clifftop cycle path between Leblon beach and Barra de Tijuca which had not been built to survive such high seas, killing two people.
Last year, Rio’s city government and the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro produced a study entitled Strategy for Adapting to Climate Change.
“The current challenge consists in deepening knowledge and monitoring of oceanic phenomena and the evolution of the sea bed and coast,” a spokeswoman for the city’s secretariat of the environment said in an e-mail.
An “adaption plan” for climate change produced with professors from the federal university suggested strategies to deal with vulnerabilities in areas such as transport, health and housing, but so far little has been done.
Nara Pinto, 38, who lives in the sprawling Rocinha favela and sells snacks on the pavement overlooking Copacabana beach, said the loss of Rio’s famous beaches would cost a lot of jobs.
“The beach is a tourist point,” she said. “What can be done to stop this?”
Dominic Phillips in Rio de Janeiro
SHANGHAI, CHINA
17.5 million people affected
“Shanghai is completely gone — I’d have to move to Tibet,” said resident Wang Liubin, when shown projections for the city after 3°C of global warming.
When it comes to flooding, the coastal city is one of the world’s most vulnerable. Now one of the world’s biggest ports, the former fishing village is bordered by the Yangtze River in the north and divided through the middle by the Huangpu River; the municipality involves several islands, two long coastlines, shipping ports and kilometers of canals, rivers and waterways.
In 2012, a report from a team of UK and Dutch scientists declared Shanghai the most vulnerable major city in the world to serious flooding, based on factors such as numbers of people living close to the coastline, time needed to recover from flooding and measures to prevent floodwater.
According to Climate Central projections, 17.5 million people could be displaced by rising waters if global temperatures increase by 3°C.
Projections show the vast majority of the city could eventually be submerged in water, including much of the downtown area, landmarks such as the Lujiazui skyline and the historical Bund, both airports, and the entirety of its outlying Chongming Island.
Since 2012, the government has been making steady inroads to tackle the threat, including building China’s largest deepwater drainage system beneath the Suzhou Creek waterway, made up of 15km of pipes to drain rainwater across a 58km2 area.
It has also rolled out a 40 billion yuan (US$60 billion) River Flood Discharge project which is to stretch for 120km between Lake Taihu and the Huangpu River to try and mitigate the risk of the upstream lake flooding.
Flood prevention walls are being built along the waterfront — in places so high the river is blocked from view — and 200km more are promised across the city’s outlying districts.
Flood controls have been put in place along the famous Bund waterfront, where the walkway has been raised to help counter a flood risk, as well as a series of water controls and dams.
Helen Roxburgh in Shanghai
MIAMI, FLORIDA
2.7 million people affected
Few other cities in the world have as much to lose from rising sea levels as Miami, and the alarm bells sound ever louder with each successive “king tide” that overwhelms coastal defenses and sends knee-deep seawater coursing through downtown streets.
Locals consider this the “new normal” in the biggest city of Florida’s largest metropolitan area, which would simply cease to exist with a 3°C temperature rise. Even at 2°C, forecasts show almost the entire bottom third of Florida — the area south of Lake Okeechobee which is home to more than 7 million people — submerged, with grim projections for the rest of the state in a little more than half a century.
In Miami-Dade county alone, almost US$15 billion of coastal property is at risk of flooding in the next 15 years.
A sense of urgency is evident at city hall, where commissioners are asking voters to approve a “Miami Forever” bond in this months ballot that includes US$192 million for upgrading pump stations, improving drainage and raising sea walls.
“We have a really precious city that many people love and are willing to invest in right now, but it’s going to take some funds to protect it,” city commission vice chair Ken Russell said.
Last year, the city of Miami appointed sea-rise expert Jane Gilbert into the newly created role of chief resilience officer with instructions for a robust stormwater management plan that also looks at storm surge, such as that from Hurricane Irma in September which brought significant flooding to downtown Brickell and neighboring Coconut Grove.
Proposals include elevating roads and even abandoning neighborhoods to the water to protect others.
“We need universal recognition that we’re all in this together to protect this amazing global city that we’ve become,” she said.
Natalia Ortiz, who grew up in Miami, fears the future.
“It’s very scary,” said Ortiz, who works with the CLEO Institute, a Miami-based climate change advocacy group. “My son is 11 and my daughter is nine, so they’re young, but I think about their future, will they be able to raise their children in Miami the way I had the luxury of raising mine?”
Richard Luscombe in Miami
METHODOLOGY
Flood maps were created using sea-level rise estimates from Climate Central and digital elevation data.
Maps include OpenStreetMap data. Temperature projections are based on University of Washington emissions modeling and UN warming estimates.
Trajectories have been updated to match latest temperatures as recorded by the Met Office Hadley Centre.
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