STOCKHOLM, March 10 (Xinhua) -- Climate scientists
warned on Tuesday that sea level rise could exceed one meter by 2100 if
governments fail to control global warming effectively, said reports from
Copenhagen.
"The upper range of sea level rise by 2100 could be
in the range of about one meter, or possibly more," said a statement released by
climate scientists at a three-day gathering in Copenhagen from Monday in
preparation for the UN Climate Change Conference due in December in Denmark.
The estimate almost doubles the projection of 18 cm
to 59 cm by the end of the century made in previous studies.
"In the lower end of the spectrum it looks
increasingly unlikely that sea level rise will be much less than 50 cm by 2100,"
the statement said.
"This means that if emission of greenhouse gases is
not reduced quickly and substantially, even the best case scenario will hit low
lying coastal areas housing one in ten humans on the planet."
The new study included the loss of ice from the
Antarctic and Greenland Ice Sheets, according to the statement.
"The ice loss in Greenland has accelerated over the
last decade," Konrad Steffen, director of the Cooperative Institute for Research
in Environmental Sciences at the University of Colorado, Boulder, was quoted as
saying.
"The upper range of sea level rise by 2100 might be
above one meter or more on a global average, with large regional differences
depending where the source of ice loss occurs," Steffen concluded.