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arksdad
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Posted 7 Months ago #1
Global Warming, Pollution Add to Coastal Threats

6 minutes ago Science - Reuters

By Alister Doyle, Environment Correspondent

OSLO (Reuters) - A creeping rise in sea levels tied to global warming, pollution and damage to coral reefs may make coastlines even more vulnerable to disasters like tsunamis or storms in future, experts said Monday.

Few coastal ecosystems are robust enough to withstand freak waves like the ones that slammed into Asian nations from Sri Lanka to Thailand Sunday, killing more than 22,000 people, after a subsea earthquake off Indonesia.

But global warming, poorly planned coastal development and other threats over which humans have some control are weakening natural defenses ranging from mangrove swamps to coral reefs that help keep the oceans at bay.

'Coasts are under threat in many countries,' said Brad Smith at environmental group Greenpeace. 'Development of roads, shrimp farms, ribbon development along coasts and tourism are eroding natural defenses in Asia.'

Scientists say a build-up of heat-trapping gases in the atmosphere from human burning of fossil fuels threatens to trigger more powerful storms and raise sea levels, exposing coasts to more erosion.

Leaders of small island states will meet in Mauritius on Jan. 10-14 to debate threats such as global warming.

World sea levels rose on average by 10-20 cm (4 to 8 inches) during the 20th century and an additional rise of 9-88 cm is expected by the year 2100, according to latest report by the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change in 2001.

RISING SEAS

Island nations like the Maldives, swamped by the tsunami, could literally disappear beneath the waves if seas rise. And in Bangladesh, 17 million people live less than one meter above sea level, as do many in Florida in the United States.

Richard Klein, a senior Researcher at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research in Germany, said vulnerability to natural disasters often went hand in hand with poverty.

'Vulnerability has as much a social dimension as an environmental

defend against the seas, for instance, but developing states could not.

He suggested better early warning systems for everything from cyclones to tsunamis in the Third World.

'And one of the first risks for small islands is not that they will be submerged (by rising sea levels) but there will be no fresh water,' he

equipment would be too costly.

Smith at Greenpeace said damage to coral reefs was also making coasts more vulnerable to battering by the sea.

An international report early this month showed that about 70 percent of the world's coral reefs had been ruined or were under threat from human activities, ranging from over-fishing to coastal pollution and global warming.

'Corals form a storm barrier and if they die many islands will be more

(Additional reporting by Ed Stoddard in Johannesburg)
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cosmosgazer
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Posted 7 Months ago #2
Perhaps we ought to start thinking about limits to longevity.

The modern conveniences and leisure time we enjoy today were largely unheard of or nonexistent just a few hundred years ago. We get plenty of good living in 65 or 75 years. Do we absolutely have to squeeze out every last year we can, regardless of suffering or infirmity?

Why not stop the production of flu vaccines, and let nature back in a little? This policy change would also put the brakes on the world's politics and economy. We don't need to be 'pedal to the metal' at all
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Scoundrel
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Posted 7 Months ago #3
Tends to get young kids too. I presume we can refer the moms to you?

josh halpern
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