I find it very telling that many of these comments in this thread say something like 'my area won't be affected' or 'I'm smart and moved' Only thinking about ourselves is what got us here.
@@lului1456you are a fool for even thinking that anybody can save somebody from God doing, he is doing this, I'm focused on saving my own soul not some strangers trying to figure out how to fix what God has determined to destroy ignorant lady
Naive people who believe in climate change will give power to evil ideologues so they can “fix it”. The same people who murdered Gadaffi and created the economic migrant crisis flooding Europe with Africans and Arabs. Stupid people believing idiotic “science” produced as propaganda, those people are going to kill billions and pretend it was a good thing. Because some liar in a labcoat will tell them so on PBS.
Sea level rise takes a long time to accelerate relative to a human lifetime. Sea level rise rise refugees are going to remain rare for a while. Then they will grow exponentially.
@@AliciaOnlineGameplay I’m not saying there aren’t any other factors, but the buildup on the coasts can’t help the situation. Furthermore, the harvesting of trees which absorb water and continue the water cycle is detrimental to an already fragile ecosystem. Trees also provide shade, absorb CO2 which feeds to climate change. I say stop cutting down forests and encourage more adaptive measures for a cohesive life with climate
Yes, coastal flora like mangroves keep the soil compacted and act as a barrier for incoming tides, slowing them down. In their absence, there is more erosion of the coast, plus waves and tides reach much more inwards
@@maureenjacobs3697 Someone needs to tell our climate czar (tyrant) nitwit John Kerry flitting around the world in his wife's private jet that planting trees does not remove carbon from the earths carbon based life forms. Everything that holds carbon in living cells will release it when these living things die. You people are not very bright are you? It is true that releasing sequestered carbon creates more life and if you consider life to be pollution then go live in the Sahara although the worlds dead places are all being threatened with abundance - holy shit run for your lives.
Lived in South Miami for 30 years and 3 years ago I moved to the mountains of North Carolina. The area I lived in was constantly being flooded so I packed my stuff and got out of there.
The last ice age ended around 15,000 years ago if I’m not mistaken. Since then the planet has been warming and the ice has been melting/‘retreating’. It’s still happening. It’s earths destiny to warm and cool. Mankind has just sped it up a little. All the wacko’s on both ends of the argument is what makes it more confusing than what it is. And yes, we should limit burning ‘fossil fuels’ because honestly, who the hell wants to breath that crap into your lungs if there’s an alternative. And yes, that is a major contributor to climate change. Full disclosure- I am a gas guzzling largish(38’) boat owner so I’m smart AND I’m guilty but I’m not ignorant. Own your truth.
@@Dave-vy8wgit makes a huge difference if you are hit by a car at 3 mph or at 30mph. Yes, sea level was rising but we massively increased the rate. This is all on top of the “natural” sea level rise. When you talk to Denise like you they point out the very slow increase since 1900 but they never actually take a look at the decal increase which shows that it was increasing way slower in 1900 and is massively picking up speed.
At some point real estate prices in these areas are going to plateau, and then it will start to hit home ( pun intended ) how serious and irreversible sea level rise is. Enjoy the view from the mountain!
My way of coping with living near a coast was to move to Arizona instead, where I can enjoy the dryness of a megadrought instead. I kinda joke...but it sorta felt like a pick your poison scenario. I genuinely do not think there's a chance in hell this world has the fortitude to actually do anything to thwart climate change. We just got through two years of people screaming that a mask is oppression. Think how they'll react to significant changes in their lifestyles.
Arizona is burning again the Tunnel Fire is out of control with very little chance at this point of getting it under control anytime soon with the fire fighting aircraft grounded due to high winds. I’m a snowbird getting ready to head back to the Great Lakes and for another year I’m worried about wild fires being a problem getting out of Arizona.
@@roberthicks1612 I’m looking for my way out of a state with 3 wild fires and two main highways out running west to east one the Tunnel Fire is right now north of I40 and spreading fast last night it was 30 square miles and grew 6,000 acres overnight with another fire burning near Albuquerque NM the only pass through the mountains on I40. It was two years ago that the route I take from Mesa to I40 at Holbrook I had to go through Flagstaff a much farther way the area of this fire the fire by Kingman is terrible but doesn’t affect me it’s hundreds of miles west of me. I don’t look for disasters like you said I can find them anywhere.
@@steve-ph9yg The only reason we have fires like this is they choose to do nothing to prevent them. There are places where people are threaten with being arrested and sent to jail if they do anything to prevent wild fires. Geologist say that in past centuries, there were wild fires bigger than the state of Arizona. The difference is that they happen so often and with nothing to stop them that they ran though the under brush and burned it off, leaving the trees to recover naturally. In order to have them under control, they have to put in fire breaks and do back burns periodically, but the liberals refuse to allow that. The result is that when they do start, they are almost impossible to contain. The only difference between current disasters and ones in the past, is speed we learn of it. 500 years ago, you would only learn of a major disaster if it was in your region of the world. That might take many months or even years for you to hear of it. 300 years ago, you would hear of it within months due to ships travel. 200 years ago, you would hear of it due to telegraph services within a week. 100 years ago, you would hear of it in the newspapers the next day. 50 years ago, you would hear of it on the nightly news. 25 years ago, you would hear of it in hours. today, you can watch it happen on live streaming.
I find it interesting that in most of the world, it's the poor who will be most affected, but in North America, it's the wealthy who tend to live ocean-front.
That's because the wealthy KNOW IT'S A LIE. Barack Obama hasn't bought anything but OCEAN front property since he left office. But that doesn't mean anything, right? The Four Seasons just built an ultra chic resort in the Maldives, that island chain that was supposed to be submerged by now, according to the climate hoaxers like PBS. And why does no one hold Al Gore accountable for his utterly laughable predictions about Manhattan and Miami??? Check Tony Heller's channel on here on rumble for the details of how these people LIE about "the science".
@@cavaleer You are so delusional. Ocean front property is the hottest, a good investment now and maybe for 20 years but slowly it's eroding away. Rich people don't care, but sell it before buyers catch on. Its one face real estate sellers don't talk about as it's big bucks.
The best property is of course on the high ground, with a great view, but still with ocean front property included - how else could you have those beach parties? Rich people (i e. the lords of the land) will always push the poor out, just as showed in the video. Their landlords just increase the rent, until the poor can't afford it.
We need to clean these areas that will be under water otherwise toxic stuff will poison the ocean. For example, nuclear reactors, garbage dumps, industrial chemical plants
They won't be under water because this is a propaganda video used to push the climate scam and bad politics on us. Sea level rise is about 7 inches per century and steady. The rest is fear mongering crap about ice that isn't going anywhere.
Here in Rio, Brasil, we hardly had a winter season. It was stifling hot (May thru September 2022). Now that is early Spring (Nov 2022) we are experincing unseasonal cool weather. In the southern sierra of Brazil we even had a snow fall for the first time in history in early November. Beats me!
@@torqingheads Weather can fluctuate in our times. Climate is a different story. The glaciers in the Alps are melting fast. When I was a child over 50 years ago, those glaciers were big. Now most of them are gone, and what's left is tiny.
@@samreh6156 Glaciers advance and retreat and there is a lag, for every retreating glacier that you know of somewhere another is advancing. The corrupt govt/ scientist/ media cabal will hide from you the truth . CO2 historically has followed warm periods not caused them. According to NASA the earth's mean temp is steadily falling.
Climate change is climate instability & climate extremes. Food production relies on reliable weather. 8 billion people will be impacted. We live in the Global Food Distribution century. We also live in the Age of Information. Ignorance is a choice.
As a Miamian, I cannot wrap my head around how no one seems to even worry about this. they keep building and building and this place is gonna be underwater before 2030
One thing I did not get is why in this report they mentioned that the people that own beachfront property will be able to sell their property for top dollar. But who's going to buy a house underwater...Aquaman?!
Northern California climate change sufferer here - last 3 of the 4 years I've had to evacuate due to threat of wildfires and/or power shut off for multiple days by power company for wildfire prevention. Praise God I've always had a home to return to. More and more I notice fluctuations in the weather - hotter earlier than expected in the season, winters with no rain for extended periods of time only to follow with 1-3 days of extreme rain. It's a crazy time to be alive.
@ Julie Ann Did you know a live red laser beam aimed at Sonoma County showed up, quite unexpectedly, on a live earthquake map? Those fires were/are intentional. The rolling blackouts that occurred in CA, years back, were found to be caused by Wallstreet shutting down the power in one place and then another, selling the energy. It's all planned and intentional. Just like if/when this comment is removed.
I hear you. I’m a Southern Californian. I lost my home to a wildfire. Before that happened, I lost my childhood home (we didn’t live there anymore). My friends and family members have lost homes too. I finally moved due to climate change and that was 12 years ago. It’s just getting worse. I saw the change, it’s a bad drought I keep hoping things will return to what we saw as normal. I miss my home state so much. But I couldn’t live with the fires anymore.
Here in Sweden I've noticed we had alot of snow when I was little and then we had green winters, now the winter comes months late and alot of snow in a short period then it quickly goes away and our summers are dryer and more wildfires. I unfortunately had to drive through one a couple of years ago, wasn't fun.
I live in the country mentioned by the glaciologist Kiya Riverman in the video: Bangladesh. I have to live in fear every day - not because climate change is happening - just because almost all my neighbours and family members (including my parents & spouse) are strong climate deniers. I am all alone with this ultimate climate fact in my knowledge, and I cannot convince them to start thinking to relocate to safer ground before it's too late. I cannot move alone, while seeing them suffer from the consequences. What I should do!!
I am so sorry to hear this, Mohammad but I can understand it in some ways. Very few people are excited about change and so as a species we are very good at denial. We do not want to see or understand things that make us uncomfortable and so we look away from the multiple discomforts that climate change is producing and will go on producing. For those of us who are logic minded, it can seem unbelievable that others are not grasping the damage that we have done to the earth, that is changing the climate. Unfortunately there is not a lot you can do but, you can be patient with your family and friends and help them see the changes that are already occurring in your country, especially the ones that directly impact their lives, their jobs and their ability to improve their surroundings. I would also encourage you to educate yourself around the psychology and sociology of humans as intelligent persons have done amazing research into those topics. Perhaps you will find more insights that will help you convince your friends and family of the gravity of the crisis that is occurring and will only get worse. I am glad that you are so thoughtful and are concerned about those around you as that is something to be celebrated in a world that seems increasingly centered on the individual and not on the whole. Good luck my friend.🙏
Find work in Nepal , Bhutan type of areas where elevation is 20 meters higher. And move your family . Pray for these things to happen in the Name of Jesus and it will happen . Set your mind to this goal . Pray this for 3 weeks and tell me your story.
Okay, so far you have not convinced your family to relocate, BUT you can show them the scientific evidence and keep on bringing the topic to their minds. If you want someone to do something more, make it EASIER for them. Simple graphs? Photos? A little demonstration with ice in a bowl of water? Keep trying. And meanwhile, YOU find a feasible new location to attract them away from the coast. You CAN do this, Mohammad.
I'm from Florida, Tampa and Miami. I left 40 years ago, but still return on a regular basis to visit friends. The rising water in Miami is obnvious to me, particularly in places like Matheson Hammock, Crandon Park, and parts of Miami Beach. I now live in Los Angeles. Years ago I would go RV camping at McGrath State Beach in Oxnard, CA. Now the park is closed because of constant flooding in the (former) camping area. So for me, it's real and now. At least my home is 140 feet above sea level, so this neighborhood is not at risk, as with most of LA. I got rid of all the methane appliances in my home. And I drive an electric car (not a hybrid), so I have a much lower carbon footprint than most households here, or anywhere else in the U.S.
The water in Biscayne Bay is about 5 inches higher than about 50 years ago. I grew up at Matheson before that. It flooded then. add five inches. Global rise is at about 2.3mm per year and varies but that average is over 100 years old. This video is BS gaslighting to make you scared of "climate change" We are currently in an interglacial period and we will return to cold. There is nothing man can do about it.
Living on South Florida waterfront since 1999. Just sold my house to move inland to SC. While I never got flooded the high tide in the canal clearly got higher over the years to the point that it now reaches the top of the seawall within about an inch. That puts the house 2ft above high tide now. It's only a question of time...
It's amazing and pretty terrifying that you have actually been able to track the rising ocean during your lifetime like that. Did you move because of that?
@@RyanWalshGuitar It is part of the reason; the others are 7 hurricanes, bad drivers (many without insurance), crime, crooked contractors and generally rude people. Ah yes, and ridiculously overpriced real estate.
Same here, but not to SC. The beach erosion is so insane now. I remember being a kid and the beach went out so far, now there's barely any beach left. A few years back, I think it was hurricane Matthew, washed out part of A1A which is a major beach side road and it took the city a couple years to rebuild it and set up seawalls. So sad
People, do a little research. There are areas that are, how can I put this, not going to be as badly effected. Michigan is one. Probably the Great Lakes acting as a buffer. Yes, I live in Michigan. That doesn't mean no effects here. At the least Michigan needs to gear up to take in lots LOTS of climate change refugees. Oh, the Michigan legislature and most local governments are solidly controlled by Republicans. So I don't see the compassion kicking in the way it needs.
Love being a Bangladeshi in this awful timeline of the universe where we produced 0.09 percent of the world's carbon emissions but now we are the ones to go underwater first. Also love watching people in western nations still bicker about whether or not climate change exists while my house has been starting to go underwater since before I was born
I'm sorry for your struggles dude (or dudette). It's not fair on you guys. I'm fighting to get my corrupt government to do something about climate change but they are paid by the fossil fuel corporations to pretend nothing is wrong and block all renewable energy projects. Election soon so hopefully the bastards will be voted out and my country can start doing its bit to fight the coming apocalypse.
@@Kiyoone Yep. I am fairly good with geography and study geopolitics as well as different religions, customs, archeology, paleontology, plants and animals. Do you have a serious question?
the close neighbors of China and India aren't entirely blameless either, they have the opportunity to use the catch up effect and really minimize their emissions but instead opt to invest in the same 100yo tech that causes this.
What do I think. Saying "Communities of color" and "the poorest" are effected the most is shooting yourself in the foot WRT encouraging action on climate change. The second you say that, you've lost the attention of most people in the richer nations. The focus needs to be on how climate change will negatively effect those most responsible for GHG rise.
If we can't find solidarity with the poorest communities in our society than we won't ever fix climate change. The richest will always make excuses for themselves so it's better to just be honest and present the full picture.
I think this needs to be broadcast daily. I recently talked to a few coworkers and they had no idea that this is happening. They are kind of climate deniers anyway.
Climate changes. The only thing that warms or cools the earth are the sun and occasional volcanoes. Mankind, even with the unimaginable amount of pollution caused by China and India (combined population, greater than 3 billion and counting, ie just under 50% of the global population), has no affect.
Here in the South of New Zealand, there has been what they politely call unseasonal weather. The suspended fences along coastlines where farming is practiced are common. Erosion to the landscape is becoming more evident and serious. Runoff is polluting our waterways. People talk about the heavy storms and flooding as if they were expected and compare them to other times when it was much worse as if by saying that, it's not so bad. Personally, I can feel an ominous background vibe of forboding and am looking for land inland with an altitude above 400mts above sea level away from the coast. I am trying to convey the need for preparedness and scientifically backed up information like this presentation encouraged.
No worries, as long as you settle at least 10 to 20 m above sea level, you should be safe for your life time - 400 m is a bit of an overkill, since around 70 m is the most that sea level will possibly rise, on average, and that would still take at least hundreds of years. And we don't know how many species (perhaps including ourselves) we might have killed by then.
@@asherplatts6253 Yes, don't worry, be happy. Also, don't look up, for Mars or other planets. Look down at the fertile soil and the sea, where life comes from. This species of ours will go extinct or evolve into a new wonderful world with biodiversity, peace and prosperity. No worries.
It's not even a question to me. Temperatures, at least where I live in the Bay Area (California), have risen exponentially and are becoming more erratic. One week might have normal temperatures for this time of year (80-90 degrees) and then we'll have a week where we have to stay inside our houses for fear of having a heat stroke because it's 114 outside. I've never seen anything like this before and I'm dreading the rise in heat that will probably be inevitable due to a lack of change to decrease greenhouse gasses. I'm 21 and I'm not expecting to live past 27 because by then in 2028 the world might not be a place I can survive in.
No, nothing close to it. You clearly don't know what exponential means. Sea level rise for example is hardly higher than a kerb stone in the last 300 years, and temperature has barely risen either . We simply hear more about things now
@@resse2001 well girl i’ve read an article that said that the sun is closer to earth. So it means that the earth is getting closer to the sun, but since i read it, it literally disappeared.Might be that, that is also a cause for this climate change.(i’m not saying that it’s the main reason, but A reason)
If everyone could stop being led by greed, and actually thought abt the future of our world, then we could do so much to counter this. Unfortunately, I don't see that happening.. the rich always want to b richer..
The other part of that is that the rich think their wealth will somehow protect them. They can always move, buy what they need, fortify themselves, etc. The fact is, they will be among the first to die.
@Glennsten Bergkvist The rich do what they do for selfish reasons. Wealth is taken. It is created by workers. They create the prosperity that the rich enjoy. The rich are unnecessary. They are poor stewards of our limited resources. And they are driving us to the brink of this disaster for their own purposes. They are in control and they could stop this if they were benevolent as you propose. But the truth about the rich is that they are not special. They are not better. They are human. And greed will drive them to the end of the Earth, and the rest of us with them.
As with all of these issues it comes down to who do I believe? Should I listen to the people who understand what is happening ( e.g climate scientists and flood victims) or should I go with the pig I saw flying past my window this morning ,who told me there's nothing to worry about?
The pig isn't collecting money from the govt for grants to study climate change or improving the value of his stock in solar, windmills and electric cars. Sure climate changes and has been since the beginning of time but if politicians were really concerned they wouldn't be flying all over the country every day. While the US is going crazy with wind mills China is building coal fired power plants as fast as they can.
Me from the Netherlands will have to deal with the consequences for sure and very soon. Being active in R&D into renewable technologies, I see that we as society cannot make the target 1.5C and most likely not even 2 or 2.5C. I see very little change in behavior measured in various EU studies pointing to any real change. So let's us all prepare for massive change for our children and their offsprings.
Obviously haven't read many of the newer ones then because the trend has reversed and the thinking is that we ARE going to prevent 2.5 and that catastrophic climate change has been averted but if we want to avoid the worst of the effects, we have to make more changes quicker.
The 1.5 deg C target is TOTALLY artificial, ITS MEANINGLESS ! Thats direct from the professor at the Potsdam institute who INVENTED the target for the IPCC. In his interview he explained HE had been approached by the IPCC to come up with a figure (for propaganda purposes) HE did not research and publish this as a study. He explained to them that what they wanted was scientifically meaningless, but they insisted and to use his words he just plucked 1.5 Deg C OUT OF THIN AIR ! When you live within a socialist superstate like the E.U, its hard to come to grips with the reality that the media AND the government lies to you on a daily basis about some things and are acting AGAINST your best interests, yet they are. Most of what you think you know about this is wrong. I remind you that the Minoan warm period was around 4 Deg C WARMER THAN NOW, the Holocene warmings were WARMER STILL, in fact if you look at the peak warmings over the last 8000 years they have been getting shorter and cooler as we move toward now. The Medieval warming was almost certainly a bit warmer than now, they still cannot grow grapes in the U.K as far north now as they did then. The massive changes your government have in mind for your children are NOT for their benefit, the political agenda is laid out clearly in Limits to Growth p 1972 by The Club of Rome, which is an organization set up by the Rockefeller family owners of Standard Oil, who set up the UNEP AND the IPCC, and are the IPCC's primary advisors on environmental issues. The Rockefellers are one of the planets most ruthless and unprincipled capitalists. I suggest if you want to get some ACCURATE perspectives on this issue contact CLINTEL. Because right now YOU are a danger to your grandchildrens future out of sheer gullibility.
@@sirkana I NEVER ask for references and i never give them. My perspective is shaped by scientific papers, books by scientists and speaking directly to scientists some of whom have worked for the IPCC. How about YOU list everything you think is wrong in my comment and we can take it from there.
Even the best scientists can't see all the twists and turns. We don't know what will happen, that's how the future works. All we can do is our best, teach our children and grandchildren to be analytical thinkers, involved in the political process and long term planners. They may build the world we dream of because, rather than despite off climate change.😉
@Older than dirt Don't have to worry about the climate.... Vladimir Putin is going to launch Global Thermo-Nuclear War soon... climate will be the least of your worries. I don't worry about climate or global warming at all anymore. Putin has cured me of worrying about climate and global warming.
@@robertwilliamson6121 Ha ha I've been saying this for years, these nitwit snowflakes obsess over .01 degree "perceived" temperature variations but are clueless as to the real "glow-ball" warming threat - 50 million degree fireballs the size of a city.
“How bad are we willing to let it get?” Well climate deniers are not even acknowledging the problem so, sadly, there’s the answer. Honestly, even if I did NOT believe in the contribution of mankind to the problem, I would have enough common sense to ask myself, “What if there is even the SLIGHTEST chance that it could be true?” At that point it becomes a gamble with the welfare of my children, not me. Selfish ignorance.
I'm not a climate denier, but my question is why would President Obama buy ocean front property. Why do I have to make drastic changes when elites have mcmansion and fly frequently. Society is a heat engine and climate change cannot be reversed
@@matthewm9261 : Because President Obama can afford to liquidate ocean front property as easily as he acquired it? I don't know but you seem certain enough about it to risk the welfare of your children. Good for you
@@pjesf I live in a 2 bedroom apartment and my carbon foot print is nowhere as big as others. I don't understand why there isn't a push to end to air travel and eliminating air conditioning. We know the eroi of solar panels are a joke and you can't run a modern economy on renewable power
@@matthewm9261 : "A push to end air travel". No one is talking about plunging mankind back into the stone ages. As long as fossil fuels are encouraged then there is no incentive to move away from them. GOP would be happy with NO emissions standards and nothing along those lines. And it's not JUST fossil fuels - it's recycling and deforestation. I drove route 66 through the midwest and had to haul my recycling through 6 states who can't be bothered with it. It's attitude. Selfish attitude.
I grew up in Hialeah in the 1950s. I could dig a hole in my back yard and hit the water table within two feet. The highest point in Dade county is a "hill" in one of the parks that is less than 11 ft above sea level. You have problems with septic tanks and sewers because the water can not flow downhill. The east coast of florida is a limestone shelf that runs north and south along the coast the land gradualy drops in elevation to the west. 40 miles west of the east coast the elevation might only be two feet above sea level. I think Miami and the everglades are doomed. Growing up in Miami in the 1950s was very nice. There were a lot fewer people then and a kid could go down town on his own. I miss that era.
Thank you for sharing that Richard. I've lived in The same area in and near Los Angeles all of my life and I see the changes too. I grew up in the 60's. We are currently in a Mega drought which is defined as a drought lasting 2 decades or longer. This is year 22. This mega drought started in 2000. "Since 2000, the average soil moisture deficit was twice as severe as any drought of the 1900s, and greater than it was during even the driest parts of the most severe megadroughts of the past 12 centuries, say the authors." Adapted from a press release by UCLA.
Join others, vote Green politicians into office, use mass transit and if your area laks good transportation for all, the harass them with others until they meet your needs with zero carbon vehicles.
Societal greed and overpopulation. We call ourselves an intelligent species yet repeatedly fall prey to the basal desires instilled by billions of years of evolution - get more and reproduce. Pretty hard to fight against that.
In Portland Maine we see both Gentrification AND sea level rise effects. King tides regularly flow backwards through storm drains and flood low lying inland areas, AND workforce housing is being demolished to make way for million dollar condos on the water. It is truly insane.
Maine is going to feel a tremendous squeeze when the working class no longer has any place to live to staff the resorts and clean the condos. My husband and i left in 2018 to move to NY for work and haven't looked back. Combined with how completely uninterested Mainers are in literally any changes at all (you should have SEEN the responses i got when i surveyed people about coastal geohazards for school), i can't imagine the future looks great there.
@@stephenkalatucka6213 You realize that to a billionaire a million dollar mansion is like buying a $1 Arizona Iced Tea to somebody who has $1000 in savings?
My mom has a place in Machias. "Million Dollar condos"!! There is some humor there. Land in Aroostook may be the best bet? The problem with individual parcels is coastal roads will be flooded at so many points, and disappear. Imagine Bay of Fundy plus 3 feet!! Maybe land up off the Airline, hwy 9 from Bangor to Calais will be safe?
I'm in Amsterdam, which today sits at sea level, polders around sometimes are over 10 feet below. All protected by several BN worth of flood protection. We won't suffer yet, though over 7 feet seas rise probably will do us in. Yet they're still building in the lowest polders, some 20-24 feet below. But that's still all very long term, our greatest concern is drying out of the North Africa and middle east, which will bring 10 millions of refugees. That could happen within 10-20 yrs, even quicker if another major food growing area is hit by megadrought, now Ukraine and South Russia are almost of the market for 2 years.
Very true. A 7 foot or 2 meter rise in sea level will cause billions (with a B) of people to have to leave where they are, from either floods or droughts, causing the hugest refugee crisis ever. These will be very desperate people, who have literally nothing to lose. It won't be something that any country or community can avoid by somehow keeping "them" out.
At the current rate of sea level rise (assuming there is no cooling between then and now) it will take 1423 years to rise that 7". Moreover sea levels are between 1-2 meters LOWER now than they were only 4500 years ago.
@@peterjones4180 "At the current rate" is the sticking point. As the global average temperature rises due to our current carbon and methane emissions along with the immeasurable future methane emissions from the thawing of permafrost and undersea hydrates, "the current rate" is expected to increase dramatically.
@@chrisjones6030 You need to study the physics a lot more Ch4 is NOT going to make any difference, H20 vapor is 97% of the atmospheric greenhouse gases it absorbs long wave IR in the same band widths mostly as Ch4. Those bandwidths are MOSTLY saturated. This is why the Medieval Warm Period, Roman Warm Period, Minoan Warm period, and Holocene Thermal optimums, did NOT create the effect you fear, neither did the preceding two interglacials which were both much warmer than our current one. If it did not happen at the much higher temperatures in the HWP, MWP, RWP, its NOT going to happen now. What you are looking at is a natural cycle. Likewise human Co2 emissions are LESS than 4% of the annual Co2 emissions into the atmosphere or MORE than 96% of the annual Co2 emissions are from non human sources. Co2's greatest warming effect is at 20 ppm, with every subsequent doubling of Co2, the additional warming produced DECREASES LOGARITHMICALLY. Co2 is mostly saturated and has very little ability left to add warming. Co2 ALSO absorbs IR radiation in mostly the same bandwidths as H20, and so also for that reason is mostly saturated. When you look at the paleoclimate record its very clear the amount of Co2 in the atmosphere makes no difference to the temperature, we have had massive ice ages with 4000 ppm + Co2 and high temperature periods with very LOW Co2 levels. Co2 levels have very POOR correlation to the temperature record, solar variability on the other hand has EXCELLENT correlation to the temperature record. Moreover the ice core series show clearly that its NOT rising Co2 levels that drive up temperature, its RISING TEMPERATURE that drives up Co2 with a lag of 800-1000 years. Higher Co2 levels NEVER prevent subsequent cooling, indeed Co2 levels continue to rise for some time AFTER temperatures have cooled.
@@peterjones4180oceans are taking up over 90% of warming, hard to notice - as yet. Slight temp rise does melt the frozen-to-bottom underside of these glaciers, around all of Antarctica. When they get loose, we will start to see some extra rise. Still take some 100s yrs to do that 7 feet, but over 1000, not. If you are concerned about them sea levels of bronze age - pyramids didn't even exist, let alone, this modern interconnected global economy, where war in Ukraine means Africa won't get no wheat and can no longer afford fertilizer - essential component K mined in Ukraine, with such economy so easily disrupted, rising oceans are the least of your concerns. We'll be fighting over food & water within 30 years, making the current wave of refugees seem a 4th July party in comparison . If you do think the old, not the future sea levels are relevant, the last time we had this level of CO2, mid Miocene or so, sea levels were some 100+ feet higher. Those levels, co2 and seas, took eons to rise. We got to 420 ppm CO2 in half a century, half of emissions after 1990. Your little car drive to the mall, makes co2 level rise by 1ppm, in the cargo volume of a modern container ship, over 22000 cubic meters. Take a guess just how many of those drives are made around the world, each day. Plus all factories, planes, ships, plus plus plus. Things are looking up, mister.
Sorry to break this to you Dr Michael Mann, but 1.5 degrees is gone. It would take massive carbon removal on a scale that we can’t (won’t) do. 2 degrees C has serious implications but is a achievable target to aim for.
I hope people read this. As a Northerner I am well aware of how ice melts. In the spring it seems like it will never leave even as the temperature rises. Then you see it gets a little soft but it still won't go. The next stage it changes color, gets slushy and it's all gone in 2 days. If we wait for slush, it's too late. Thank you @pbs
@@AORD72 That's "climate change" for ya. Tell the Marxists in Washington we need them to ban summers in order to save our -precious bodily fluids- ice!
My houses basement never flooded until last winter, when the snow melted and it rained the same day. Now, it’s flooded 3 times total since then. I live about a mile from the coast , near Boston. Life is gonna get scary , fast, for a lot of us living on the coasts.
Yeah, a lot of politicians thinks climate change is just hotter summer. But in reality it’s more like extreme weathers, certain areas get exceptionally large amount of rainfall while some areas gets drought. Summers would get crazy hot and winters get freezing cold. That stirred up heat exchange also creates more hurricane too
@@hughlachesis8020 More and more intense hurricanes too. Imo things are pretty screwed already and people should prepare for disaster that is coming. We aren't stopping the warming; we can't even agree on basic scientific facts in the US. (for those in US)
@@hughlachesis8020 exactly. Climate change means having to budget for a basement water pump, and having to figure out how much longer you have in the current house before you need to move. Basically, making the poorer poor.
@@hughlachesis8020 It's not just the politicians - who probably don't really think that way, but are likely getting campaign donations from people making money on the status quo. In much larger numbers, it's average people - those who do not have science degrees, and maybe didn't take a lot of science in high school or college. Average people need to be shown how this is happening to them, using what they or we see all around.
I know it seems hopeless with all the world’s most powerful people ignoring the issue. But please know that not only can we avoid the worst of the crisis, we can still avoid many of the more “minor” negative effects! We’re getting to the point that it is cheaper to use reusable energy than coal and oil! Yes there are wrinkles to iron out, but we are at a point now that was unimaginable 12 years ago. We can’t give up, not now, because that’s exactly what big petroleum wants. Stay safe everyone. ✌️🕊☮️
I love how they talked to people who are being forced out of their homes due to rising rent yet the crew stayed in an airBnB. The lack of awareness in that one is ironic.
This is why I got the heck out of Florida. I owned a house, sold it and took off. I'm in north central alabama now, 600 ft above sea level, i'll be good for a while
When winter in Riverside California included 100% temperatures, I moved my family to Oregon. Some of us are able to read the handwriting on the wall. 👍
In India, southern part, this year we just didn't experience winter as we used to just 5-6 years ago. There was a cold wave in Northern parts but it did little to cool off temperatures and that too for just a week or so. Now we are experiencing heatwave after heatwave right from the start of February. I'm scared to think what's going to happen in a decade or two!
We don't live on or near the coast, but I'm sure people relocating will affect us. Our season shifts are noticeably altered already. The unpredictability is a majoor gardening and agriculture challenge.
I moved away from the coast a decade ago because of this. The models being too conservative was already being discussed online and I lived in a hurricane prone area. No way I was dealing with an increased chance for a cat 5 hitting me.
@ Adam Pope Smart move, you have my respect, sir - From me, living on the East Coastline. My trust is in The Lord to get out in time, should something occur. God bless you 🙏🙏🏽🙏🏻
LOL! How many CAT 5 hurricanes have made landfall in America? Has there been ANY change in the average number of hurricanes per decade or their intensity since records began? NO! The only thing that has changed is our ability to detect and study them. You need mental health treatment.
Same. Was living off the coast of NC and that place is quickly becoming a hot mess due to climate change and capitalism so made the choice to move mid west.
@@JynxeeKat lol same. I was living outside Wilmington. I looked at future sea level rise and at three meters my house was going to be river front property. I used to think that three meters wouldn't happen in my lifetime but after seeing all these ice shelves collapsing, I'm beginning to think that we're in the midst of a modern meltwater pulse.
@@ax14pz107 I lived in Jax for 15yrs. Yeah we both know what’s up. Every new storm brings a huge host of problems. Lots of peeps don’t realize the plethora of farming communities in and around the coast as well and how it adds to other issues! Nothing like having fecal waste ponds over flowing everywhere. Yeah I’m enjoying life in the Rockies.
We need to hold the Democrat party responsible for reparations for being the party of slavery first. Who do we hold responsible for the stabbing death of a young girl, is it the steel makers, the knife manufacturers, their distributors, or their retailers? That tool you are tapping on was made with petroleum.
Are you innocent? Have you used electricity or ridden in a car during your life? The climate change doesn't come from them pumping oil. It comes from everyone USING it. Go look in the mirror for the "Guilty Party" that needs to pay.
@@tr7b410 You CLEARLY stated that is was THEIR Fault. No. We all share the blame. If they should pay to fix it, no one is innocent. We all used that power that was generated. Including you "Evolved" beings that went to college and got brainwashed into forgetting you used to leave lights on and used heat and AC and drove. Get off your pedestal.
I think a rise of 2°C is barely realistic, more likely its going to be 3°C. I dont think the world will work together rapidly to reduce emissions enough. Some countries might try, but some others wont, which in turn makes the efforts of those that are doing something less popular among its people. Its a typical tragedy of the commons scenario. Particularly those countries that have a different focus, like catching up to the top 10% of wealthy countries dont want to be kept away from this due to climate saving restrictions. And countries that have a focus on war or religion (and at times this seems to even include the USA, honestly) also have climate not at the top priority.
Scientists say the entire atmosphere could ignite and the Earth could become another sun unless we become socialists in the next month or two. Elon Musk is selling space on his rocket ship to Mars which will be warmed to a pleasant Florida beach temperature by its two suns. No time to lose
We don't need to get discouraged from thinking about what other countries won't do or will do. What matters most is what citizens of the United States do. We are the biggest consumer per person in the world. Once we change our lavish lifestyles of "buy buy buy" and delivery of goods "now now now" and shift to a circular, services-oriented economy it'll be easier for other countries to follow suit. Maybe then they'll aspire to develop economically in a way that mirrors the more humble US lifestyle.
The ocean is 40ft from our deck. Next door is an 18" high seawall built in 1976, the water isn't any higher than it was in 76. Someone that doesn't understand tides and king tides and how they are influenced may be fooled but here in south Fla the average level isn't changing. 25 years ago Al Gore said south fla would be under water and the polar ice cap would be gone by 2016. Here we are in 2024 and I believe he invested in solar, wind mills and passing out govt grants to study climate change.
It does not look like the collapsing glaciers are going to stop melting. Maybe it would be a good idea if humans rethink the way that they presently live. It might be a good idea to take a lesson from the people who have been adapting to rising sea levels for the last 100 years. The Scandinavians have built dams and built floating houses which seem to be some of the answers to how we can survive rising sea level rise better.
The sea level rise wont be a factor for several decades, houses can be raised, sea walls can be built , homes right on the beach in already low lying areas need to except the risks. Too much fear mongering in this video. Its not like the water is going to flow in like a tsunami. Will humans even be around in 100 years, I'm thinking maybe not .
Global warming and ecosystem destruction are accelerating at an exponential rate. Resource depletion and population and consumerism will prevent any meaningful remediation. We are going AWAY. VERY SOON. We will be gone before most of the sea level rise. Food and water are already becoming an issue. THEY will never tell the truth.
@@stridersmythe8860 I agree with you on the fear mongering in this video. Human caused climate change is extremely ropey once you look past the mainstream rhetoric. Will humans be around after 100 years, of course.. in what numbers it's a little unclear.. We've been on this earth in our current form far longer then we've been told. Civilisations come and go with cycles that our common society fails to recognise. A lot of these cycles are governed by our sun. Pole reversals, Grand solar minimums come along and change up our world almost like a clean slate. Humans always survive because we are so intelligent and adaptable. Our current issue is a corrupt globalist cabal, holding humanity back so as to remain in power. We have solutions to a lot of the challenges we face, we just need to push these parasites out of the way and start uniting and creating a world we all want to live in.
Underground volcanoes. National geographical said that there's about 91 volcanoes underneath the ice 19 are active and 3 are very active. This article was published about 10 yrs ago.
Nobody will talk about the main causes which are totally out of our control, because it won't make money. The moon isn't slowly leaving Earth's orbit. The Tonga hunga volcano didn't erupt causing millions of tons a green house water vapour into the atmosphere. The Sun's 11 year cycle and solar flares have nothing to do with warming the Earth either. If people just did their own homework and educate themselves to understand that nothing stays the same in the universe. If you dare speak the truth to the narrative, Super AI might learn something they don't want it to know. Cheers Blessings Alan 🙏.
Human activities have a significantly greater impact on global air quality compared to volcanic pollution. . Human activities, such as burning fossil fuels, deforestation, and industrial processes, release around 36 billion metric tons of carbon dioxide (CO2) annually. In contrast, volcanoes emit about 0.3 to 0.36 billion metric tons of CO2 per year. This means we would literally be waiting for 100 years of worldwide volcanic activity to match just one year of human impact. This comparison is a dead horse that uneducated politicians with corporate dollars in their pockets continue to feed the masses. Additionally, human activities contribute to other pollutants like nitrogen oxides, particulate matter, and sulfur dioxide, which have significant health and environmental impacts. Volcanic emissions, while they can have localized effects, are relatively minor on a big picture/global scale.
And of course in addition to the rising seas, the increased heat levels are going to affect people who are very far away from any ocean. It may very well be that summers in some locations are going to get so hot that people will literally die, and if / when that happens, there will be significant migrations literally for survival from those places too.
@LoneRider perhaps, but the mass migrations will still need to happen. How will new land be appointed to dislocated people? Who will have the right to a new land and who won't? Huge potential for conflict here.
@LoneRider People look to the past to much when it come to climate change but nobody is looking at where we are at today. During the previous climate shifts we did not have ticking timebombs located all over the planet. An example is the 450 nuclear power plants that will go into radioactive meltdown when they either get hit by tsunami or they no longer have trained humans to keep refrigerators running. Nuclear power plants are just one example there are many other toxic chemical plants etc.
It may be that temperatures will increase to where Siberia and antarctic regions become liveable; i wonder if that liveable land increase might he greater than the submerged coastlines?
@@rogerjohnson2562 It's not just the actual amounts of land that are important here, because we still require dock facilities along coastlines regardless. If these are overwhelmed by rising oceans then we're still in trouble. And I'm not sure how good the formerly frozen locations would be for growing crops either, for example.
Here in Vancouver the rich are all lower levels and beachfront (Richmond is build on sand banks, of all the stupid ideas...) while the poorer families are forced to live further in on the mainland on raised elevations. As such, the flooding will affect those who caused it the most.
If sea levels rise by 30ft, I'll be living on a small island. The nearest town will be mostly gone, other surrounding towns will most definitely disappear beneath the waters, the whole area will be fragmented with hilltops turned into tiny islands. This is actually starting to happen now, as the river through the town has gone from flooding once every few years to flooding a few times every year. Maybe we should look into buying a boat.
I live in New Orleans. In Louisiana sea level rise has already contributed to increased flooding during storms. All of southern Louisiana is basically flat so there is nothing to slow or stop the water as long as there is pressure pushing it onto land. As hurricanes increase in intensity as predicted more and more communities will be rendered uninhabitable due to massive storm surges. Even in the past few years damage has increased dramatically; places that haven't flooded in the past have been inundated up to 40 miles inland.
Increased flooding can happen for many reasons, quite normal in high tides for water flowing from land to disperse more slowly, it's like pushing up against a heavy truck. Remember the ides of climate predictions, no ice in Artic by 2015, then again by 2018, Maldives under water 2018 ..none happened ...on to the next scare story ..of a 1.5-2 feet increase in Louisiana sea levels by 2050... far enough away to create a "now" stir, but far enough away for those that made the predictions to have disappeared quietly, when it doesn't happen.
The cascade ice cliff failure has romped inland over 100km inland from the no longer in existence ice shelves on the coast of Thwaites and Pine Island. This has dumped the hydrostatic pressure head on the massive volcanic field extending from the coast to the central West Antarctic rift by thousands of PSI. There is more geothermal water outbursting from beneath the Glacial channels than the Amazon in peak flood. East Antarctica and Greenland are behaving in exactly the same fashion. It's tipped into a runaway exponentially accelerating blowout, and we can expect global catastrophe within 5 to ten years. The scientific community is decades behind. They are talking about ice shelves that are no longer in existence, and misrepresenting basal outbursts from the interior as seawater erosion. Nothing can stop or slow these exponential continental geothermal bore blowouts.
Grindup baker is an ignoramus who is lying that you can trust Google Earths images. The European S1 synthetic aperture radar is the only clear images available. It sees right through cloud, has a 40m pixel resolution, shows frozen water as white and radar absorbent earth and wet surfaces in dark shades. For scale 1 degree of latitude is about 112km in these images. Use the low bandwidth browser and go select last 3 days or a week. They are no longer publishing the last 24 hours images of sensitive areas until a few days later. If you don't monitor them every few days like I do they are no longer available after a week. www.polarview.aq/.
I do find it funny that folks seem to ignore the massive West Antarctic Rift System and all the volcanic activity there. I can't say I've heard about the change in pressure increasing melt there, but its certainly interesting and something I'll have to look into. After all, the Jokulhaups of Iceland show firsthand how volcanism can locally melt quite sizeable quantities of ice. iirc, Greenland and West Antarctica are by far the most dangerous, as Greenland is very susceptible to climate variation and West Antarctica is generally pretty low-lying and reasonably far north. East Antarctica, thankfully, is pretty generally stable and has been frozen for tens of millions of years, well before the Quaternary Ice Age began (which humanity seems to be making a damn big effort to end). But Greenland and West Antarctica certainly hold enough water to cause quite the mess for humanity already.
Very interesting info. But if you say "the scientific community is decades behind" and say something that goes against the mainstream message of the scientific community, and if you want your post to have any clout while making such a bold claim, I'd think you should provide sources or state your credentials. If you want your comment to be taken seriously that is. Otherwise, I'll assume you're a Russian bot trying to stoke hopelessness and inaction and you probably don't want that. :p
I don't think we have a chance of doing anything to slow it down. There are a lot of people that are doing their part to cut their footprint, but a lot more people that don't even try. The conversation has been going on for about 30 years or so now with very little action from most people. By the time those people figure it out the Oceans will have risen 30 feet. Then it will be too late to slow it down let alone reverse it.
@@kirstinstrand6292 there are things that occur around the world that change coastlines occasionally. what he's speaking about is not climate change. if you understand climate change you have to take a large area of country and check the the temperatures .because that's where they started .until they realize people were doing research .and then they had to make it be climate change .you see back in the seventies they had said we were going to be frozen over by now !!now!! they're saying it's climate change!! they need another narrative !the people behind it are world government !!they need your money!! They need you to think alike!!!! to support world government.. even the pope is behind it if you'd understand prophecy you wouldn't be confused about it !!!..the Bible tells us what these people are going to do!!!! notice they just passed a climate change tax on you and !!!you're paying for something that doesn't exist! that ought to please you!! if you check the records of a large area like lake Michigan from the 1800s when they first started keeping record ..of it.. the lake froze over once back in those days ..that let you know how cold a large area is.. it froze over four times or better after that since 1976 ..thats definitely not climate change.. based on temperature ..that's where they started.. so you can stay blind if you want.. to and get behind people that support it ,that ends up stealing your money ,from your pocket, and your freedom in the future, to bring you into a socialist world government system, because that's who's paying for it ,I've studied this for 30 years, they will not pay a climate scientist .if he says anything different ....wake up.
@@kirstinstrand6292 you got to remember what he's saying there they started that stuff in 1980 something and they said we would be flooded by now I checked the sea levels they haven't risen one inch on the coastlines anywhere if what happened that he says would happen we would all be dead by now since 1980 ..you see they got the chicken little story going here, in here believing it.
Even in places along the U.S. West coast where homes are high above sea level up on the cliffs, those cliffs are suffering sped up erosion as a result of sea level rise. It doesn't matter that they're significantly higher than sea level. They're sill going to be impacted by this phenomenon.
A few years ago I went to see singer Steve Lawrence's house up for sale in California beach front. Not that I could afford it. He had invested a million $$ building a sea barrier to keep the house from flooding. Still, it had a $10M price tag. I hope the price includes a snorkel.
Many houses are already falling into the ocean, some in Sonoma County, some in Pacifica and other places. Sea level rise and soil erosion mostly to blame. I remember a Geology professor in college saying that our society overbuilt on the coasts because of a sort of Goldilocks period where climate and weather near the coast was more stable and climate change had not yet made itself felt. He said watch and see what happens as more storms and weather events decimate cliffs and ocean moves farther inland. This was before we were even talking very much or knew very much about climate change
@@glendabarton45barton48 and the reason coastal regions will loose ground only reason the coastline of all countries is highly populated was for the trade routes we don’t have to rely on that as much with our technology in transport but people still all gravitate to the coast it’ll just shrink for some and gain for others
I live in the intermountain West where we’re in the midst of a 1200-year drought. It’s so wild to me that I may be driven out of my home bc of a lack of water, while someone else is driven out bc of too much water, and yet, the root cause is still the same in both cases (human-driven climate change). We humans sure do have a talent for screwing things up, don’t we? 🥺
I live in the Netherlands. We go blub blub if waterlevels rise rapidly. A big part of our country is well beneath sealevel as it is. So a rise of 2 meters will be interesting to say the least. Especially with springtides. We seem to have a government that isn't all that keen on taking drastic measures. It is frustrating at best. And we are world renowned for our waterworks. It is strange to see that it doesn't seem to worry our politicians all that much. We are driven by economics. But if we don't take action the economic impacts will only get bigger and bigger. We have had a drought that is quite insane. With rivers running dry and prices flying through the roof because of it. A lot of goods are shipped over rivers in Europe. And a lot of ships couldn't travel or could only take a 1/3 to a 1/4 load because the waterlevels were at record lows. I think we are in for some tough times. And this summer is just a prequel. Thank you for the information of this video. It lights another side of Climate change.
I expect that by 2050, there will be over a billion climate refugees around the world with nowhere to go. What I didn't expect is that such troubles will also *already* be affecting poor people in our own country.
And there will be over 5 billion angry right wingers crying about those migrants, even though their own inaction and stupidity is what created their problem.
@@marksouthern7542 Sea level rise and temperatures that are too hot to survive. Think about what you just said though: over half of humanity lives near the coast. What happens when all of them need to move. That billion I mentioned, which I can cite studies about, are the ones who don't simply have a place they can move to.
@@AvangionQ If the rate of sea level rise doesn't escalate, then the maximum height of sea level rise will be approximately 300mm over this century. Last Century it was about 150mm. No problem to deal with this amount of sea level rise. It is easier to manage heat than cold. The cold kills many more than the heat. Many places on earth will benefit from 1C of warming. Think of Canada and Russia for example. Over the last few centuries the world has been greening and crop yields are up due to more C02 in the atmosphere. However, the overall trend of temperatures has been downward since the Holocene high stand. If you want my prediction, I suspect we are now heading into a colder period until 2035 (ish).
@@marksouthern7542 300mm? Try six feet by 2100. Some places will have over ten feet sea level rise. Yes, it's not an equal distribution. Only takes two feet of sea level rise before we start seeing migrations. No wonder you weren't worried. You didn't know how bad it's gonna get.
so a scientist that worked on the UN for sea levels says that the ocean hasnt risen at all in at least 100 years must be full of crap ?? come on people stop listening to this junk
"the last hours of ancient sunlight" explains all of this in much greater detail both data regarding past cultural behaviors and the causality behind it and our current situations. Personally I live mobile, an Rv that's solar driven for a host of reasons, this being 1 of them. As far as I'm concerned, the consciousness shift needed to Change all of the actions that has set our demise in motion won't happen until its well to late.
@@brucefrykman8295 climate change, areas of conflict, high population during an issue, localized problems of any kind... These events where its advantageous to leave are 1 of my focuses where being mobile vs being planted (in a house/apt etc) is ideal. So let me give an example, Louisiana or having to leave a country (Ukraine as an example).being able to have all your things, refrigeration, a roof, electricity etc in evading an issue is the focus. There aren't to many that can evade a storm or what ever and come back if desired, they grab what they can and can carry and likely loose the rest. There is a 2nd level so to speak where leaving the rv behind if needed is also a path of resolve on my side as well. Not having rent or mortgage is also ideal which is the 2nd main reason.
@@plasmacastorable Living in Hot Springs Village I have acquired many new neighbors and friends fleeing Shreveport, Baton Rouge, and New Orleans, not for the climate but for the crime. All of these places have been controlled by Democrats ever since reconstruction. The weather here is fine and crime is nearly non-existent but then our government at the local, county, and state level is 100% Republican.
@@brucefrykman8295 I knew a accountant from Biloxi Mississippi who had thousands of clients during Hurricane Katrina and other disasters like tornadoes that lost everything. Insurance refused to cover the disasters claiming an act of "God as a outlet" to not pay their clients. You can thank Republicans for that stipulation. Laissez faire and screw the consumer. Unfortunately storms and more disasters like Katrina and the summer of 9000 tornadoes will only increase.
Move as close to ground zero as possible. You'll avoid all the horrific pain and suffering that will be visited over the entire earth, as a result of a nuclear war.
I do indeed live somewhere which is very vulnerable to a rise in sea levels. I live right on the South coast of England (UK) and cities such as Portsmouth and Southampton (UK) and the densely populated areas all along the South coast will be badly flooded if sea levels rise very far. There is already a problem with tidal surges, albeit normally on the East coast of England. Low lying cities such as Hull are vulnerable too. After a certain point the tidal defenses for London (known as the Thames Barrage) will no longer be able to cope, and London has a population of over 20 million people. The Netherlands, Belgium and Denmark are also vulnerable. These are low-lying countries and any significant sea level rise will be disastrous. Coastal cities in Spain and Portugal likewise - Lisboa (Lisbon), Malaga, Oporto, Barcelona etc. Not to mention cities such as Santiago, Buenos Aires and Montevideo in South America.
Dunno why they have to make it about race when it's almost always class related. Poor white people are just as affected as poor . And rents go up all the time. it's called gentrification. It slowly spreads. I live landlocked and they are constantly pushing people out of places for more "fancy" stuff. If water just rises, all of the developed land won't just suddenly grow sand and become a beautiful beach. NOBODY is thinking that far into the future or even caring so as to buy out land that will be "seaside" long after they are dead.
I'm a climate refugee. I moved from the CA Central valley which is getting hotter and dryer every year to the CA north coast. My new home has also been severely drought afflicted
@@RyanWalshGuitar As I grew up we observed hotter and hotter temperatures and less and less rain. The main industry there is agriculture which is very water intensive. Tree nuts and fruits and dairy. Many people there are lobbying to import water from other regions but those places are also experiencing severe drought. So yes I moved because of not seeing a long time horizon of viability of agriculture as normal in the area.
@@misaelramos83 With the water levels at Lake Powell, Lake Mead, and most of the California reservoirs at very low levels, I think we are very close to a point where drastic changes to agricultural practices in the southwest and California will happen. It is already forcing governments to institute temporary programs that pay farmers to fallow fields, but I am betting that it will have to go much further into forcing changes to less water intensive crops in certain regions, and forcing changes in irrigation practices. With about 80% of water in the southwest going to agriculture, the farmers are going to be squarely in the bulls eye for changes in water use.
I live in CA central valley, and am afraid of the coming summer. This area will be forced into growing less water intensive crops. Almonds use too much water, and these almond orchards are everywhere.
@@cynthiacole6140 One thing I've observed as a Tulare County native is that the microclimates where citrus orchards are planted in the Sierra Nevada foothills were one of the first to change. This was like 10-15 years ago too. I remember Kevin Ramer on KMPH talking about how either it was gonna get too cold and destroy citrus as it formed or as it became later on, not enough cold enough nights for the fruit to set from buds. I've been away for years now so I no longer know the details.
There is a lot of focus on sea level rise, understandably, but people need to understand that this is a problem you cannot run away from. Change and loss of biodiversity alone is going to be devastating to everyone
Thanks for an interesting article. I have very little expectation of a sudden outbreak of good sense. The worst of us are doing everything they can to slow change and do what has to be done. I especially like the look at the Antarctic and how the glaciers and ice shelves "work".
It wasn't until 50 years ago that scientists even got around to actually mapping the entire continent so claims that they understand what's happening or how the ice shelves work are ridiculous.
oh look, more doomsday bs. lemme guess, these are the same folks who helped Al Gore and his "inconvenient truth" crapshow over a decade ago with its "all the coasts are going to be underwater !!!" climate change nonsense. smh, shame on you hucksters
@@nobodyspecial4702 According to them plenty of places are supposed to be under water already they just hope we forget about their claims about the Maldives being underwater before 2015 and New York under water by 2013.
Excuse you for injecting RACE into climate change. I get that you kids today think everything revolves around race, it doesn't. Frankly quit a few of us are sick of hearing u insert it into every aspect of daily life. I tuned into this to learn about THIS subject, not to gear a kid turn into racial issue. The harder racial stuff is pushed the more I tune it out. Whiny kids aligned with race baiters to create yet another reason to complaine.
Keep in mind that properties will lose their value long before the water actually rises. When it’s obvious that sea level is going to rise properties along the coast are going to lose value.
@Christina Sombutnark Don't have to worry about the climate.... Putin is going to launch Global Thermo-Nuclear War soon... climate will be the least of your worries. I don't worry about climate or global warming at all anymore. Putin has cured me of worrying about climate and global warming.
They discussed that. Ice floating on the sea doesn't change sea level when it melts. But when the ice floating on the sea is forming a barrier that stops the land ice from sliding off into the sea, then the melting sea ice is actually a problem. There's quite a lot of ice sitting on top of Greenland and Antarctica. Particularly Antarctica. When that land ice slides down into the sea, sea level is going to rise.
@@ShortBusScotty So Greenland and Antarctica will rise - slowly, over some thousands of years - and as their continental masses take up more space, sea level over the rest of the planet will rise further. That's a slow process though, so most people stick with calculating how much volume the land ice will add, and how much expansion due to heat will add. Don't buy land less than 70m above current nominal sea level and it's all somebody else's problem.
If you found this intriguing (and kinda horrifying), the book "New York 2140" imagines Manhattan after our worst predictions for sea level rise were exceeded, and Battery Park is 50ft under water.
@@brucefrykman8295 He he he, no, i understand that was merely an entertainment lavishly funded designed to make its backers large profits. Like this video. Did you notice the hugely inflated the ACTUAL rate of sea level rise, from 1.5 mm pa to 3.556 mm pa.
It is wild that there are so many people still deluding themselves about how severe the impacts of climate change will be. Poorer communities will be hit the hardest, as they always do, but after this pandemic it should be obvious how interconnected we all are and there will be no one who won't be worse off. Probably not even the billionaires if I dare say it.
Ironically enough those that recognize and face the problem will probably be the least worse off. At least there will be some slight satisfaction watching the climate denying boomers in Florida lose all their belongings to a flood.
*JUST LOOOK at your DeMonic ReLigions;* *Just LOOOOOOOK at How EVIL & VILE ( ALL ) of you Skuum ARE!!!!* *I Want to SEEEE Doomsday, by No Later than, JuLy 4, 2022!!!!* *Of Course I am ONE of GOD's PeoPLe!!! I wiLL SMILE as it ALL HAPPENS!!!*
I have been watching all of this for many years. I made the decision about 45 years ago not to live near a coastline. I went through Hurricane Carla as a child when I lived within 40 miles of Corpus Christi at the Gulf of Mexico. Later, I lived in Long Beach, Ca., which got earthquakes>possible tsunami, plus I took notice of climate change in high school. (Science nerd). Now I live in Central Texas. No place is 100% 'safe', but near an ocean? Just NO.
Highly fascinated in the king tides they are breath taking over here on the P.N.W coast the way the waves hit our rocky coast line ..... they are very dangerous and do give a good output on sea water rise entire beaches are under water during these powerful tides
It not about climate change it is about how much impact humans are having. Climate changes have been far bigger in the past without humans. E.G the melt water pulses 15000 years ago where sea levels changed by 40mm a year. A slightly warmer climate is better for humans. Imagine try to live in a glacial minimum, which due to the forces of the solar system will occur within the next 20000 years. Images the world being 10 degrees c colder.
The Thwaites Glacier is melting because of volcanoes beneath it, not because of climate change. This is reported in journal articles but the news media aren't reporting it.
@@AORD72 climate change, human impact. It's the same in this case. Scientists all over the world are freaking out because people like you want to make it a conspiracy. There are sooooo many things happening, tons of greenhouse gases are put into the air every day. Did you know there is 50 per cent more CO2 in the air than there was 100 years ago? Guess we didn't do that either. I hope you are alive in ten years. Watch what I tell you.
@Glennsten Bergkvist totally with you on the nuclear power. It would be a great time to have it. My own take on future impacts, at this point, scientists have been observing things for a while now. A lot of very smart people are seriously concerned. People will not make the necessary adjustments until it is very late. That's what we do.
Reminds me of the episode of Gilligan's Island where they thought the island was sinking and it turns out Gilligan was moving the professor's measuring stick so the professor's measurements were way off. Hahahaha.
Destined to be in a warmer and warmer world if without some earth saving scientific discovery that can make some humongous change. People as a whole, the 99% will continue living normally and only making the most basic minimal change possible as they are forced to cope with the environment.
I recently moved from coastal Southern California ( 30 miles from the beach, 200 ft. elv.) to the Sacramento Valley. Now I'm 100 miles from the beach, but it's only 30 ft ASL. Sea level rise has/is going to effect all of the delta! A couple meters will flood SO much of the central valley....
Man keeps water out of your area, it routinely flooded a century ago, and unfortunately will again. I'm right up 80 from you, in gold country. We are seeing tree die-offs, and of course fires.
for me its cause i had to read comments from humans they wrote 7 million times since 40 years ago an it felt like forever to hear the same 7 sentences from 14 billion npc again
I find it interesting to see that NOTHING is said about the reformation of ice during the winter months, nor the mention of seasonal earth cycles over time.
Immediately I’m thinking, thank god I’m living at 1000m above sea level….but that’s actually stupid. WE ARE ALL CONNECTED Just because I’m at a 1000m…I rely on Supermarket, I rely on economic security, I rely on a world that is not at war - Global security Like dominoes if the whole world order collapses then being at 1000m isn’t going to help me one iota if countries around the world all decide to start launching Nuclear missiles at each other. WE ARE ALL CONNECTED
The Earth has been going through changes ever since it was created this is nothing new and it's never gonna stop going through changes we just have to adapt
Jess- the answer is no one knows and anyone who claims to know is not to be trusted. Remember when they said Pluto was a planet….the fact is…it’s all speculation and in classic human nature fashion, there always has to be one or a group of people who claim to have the answers..lol..that’s how we have Jews, Christian’s, Muslims, Buddhist etc etc etc. everyone has their own version of what happened and what’s going to happen…but yet no one can prove anything..just sit back and enjoy the ride.
@@P2Feener305 Jeebus cheese. "They" weren't wrong about Pluto being a planet. There's nothing inherent about what a planet is. That's just a man-made category of astronomical bodies. "They" discovered through time and better technology that there are quite a few bodies of similar size to Pluto in the Keiper belt and created a new category -- dwarf planets -- to include them and Pluto. That has absolutely nothing to do with climate change. You seem to be arguing that since science made a mistake before (not really in this case, you just don't understand what's going on), you can't trust what "science" says now. Well, look at what science has gotten right. How about the internet you're blathering on? Antibiotics. Vaccines. Organ transplants. Food stability. Flight. Space travel. Electrical grids. International communications. On and on. Your whole fucking world. Do those accomplishments of science mean that science is right about climate change? A scientists would of course say no. That's because science is NOT a religion like Judaism, Christianity, Islam, and Buddhism. Religion is based on "revealed wisdom" -- the theological precepts of the faith. Science observes the world, develops testable theories to explain what it sees, and conducts those tests to determine if the theories are correct. If subsequent evidence disproves what science had accepted before, what was accepted before is discarded. That ain't religion, buckaroo. The evidence shows clearly that the increase in greenhouse gases since we began cranking carbon into the atmosphere at the beginning of the Industrial Revolution is changing the climate. Science provided evidence suggesting what the result would be in the 1850s. Even fucking Exxon research in the 1970s showed that increased carbon would change the climate. You're just another nihilist who believes in your heart that the world will die with you and doesn't give a crap about anything other than yourself and what you "enjoy." You're looking for something to tell yourself to make you feel alright about that. I know this is a long reply and if you've read it all, your lips are probably tired. So here's the short version: bleh.
There needs to be more legislative change. That's where we should be focusing all our energy on. Midterm elections are coming soon and our voting plays a big part in determining what path we continue to take.
Holding politicians accountable is the only way. At this point, it means holding their face to the grinder. (not advocating for violence). But 13 years from now, we're gonna see famine globally.
Does voting play a big part? Biden didn't even fight very hard to get his big climate agenda passed, and now it seems like it's dead in the water (no pun intended). We may blame the failure of the Build Back Better plan on Manchin and Sinema, but I am pretty sure that if they weren't holding up the bill, some other democratic senator would. I think we need to look further into mass acts of civil disobedience and massive peaceful protests to force the hands of the politicians we have, now!
@@DirtFlyer Our voting does count but I mean congressional and local voting as well. I also agree with you that we don't protest enough. I think we need to encourage a culture of sustainability. Public opinion is our most important tool. Although Biden's bill didn't pass, the head of the Department of interior has been great so far. I don't think this is a democrat vs. Republic problem, it's just that many republicans in rural areas, like to fish, are farmers, etc, aren't being educated enough on how consumerism and climate change is/will affect their livelihood and lifestyle!
@@amdonut8091 No worries. I like long comments! I'm prone to them myself! I agree that people need to participate more in state and local elections. Many states are making great strides in making changes in renewable energy production all on their own, without federal intervention. However, I have to say I have lost faith in our federal politicians being responsive to their constituents. I think special interests have a strangle hold on how they vote for legislation, both on the left and right. Oh, and Deb Haaland is awesome too, and a New Mexican!
With the ice shelf melting, would the addition of fresh water to the ocean disrupt the super-salty deep ocean "rivers"? Aren't these deep ocean currents responsible for moving weather patterns towards the north allowing these places to have temperate climates? It seems that rising sea levels is one of many problems this scenario incorporate.
Don't confuse the effects of melt water from the Greenland Icesheet / Canadian Icesheets on the Gulfstream and meltwater from the _south pole_. It may very well disrupt _some_ ocean currents, but not the one responsible for transporting heat from the Caribbean to the East Coast and Europe, as it's localized in the North Atlantic Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of Mexico.
Yes. The AMOC (Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation) is slowing down. Climatologist Paul Beckwith just posted a long video explaining all of this.
@@everythingmatters6308 and those guys were suggesting the introduction of large amounts of freshwater could switch off the conveyor and this would trigger a new ice age.
I’m 57. When I was 16 I took a cruise to Alaska. In Juneau, I walked up to Mendenhall Glacier and touched it. 25 years later I return with my husband. The glacier retreated over a mile and Mendenhall Lake was in its place. As a degreed geologist, I was mortified when I saw the lake. As a former pollution control officer for 25 years, I knew that was only the beginning.
3.2C according to Simon Clark (a climate scientist with a UA-cam channel) is what we are on track for. A lot of optimism is required to believe it will stay below 1.5 C 1.5 C required for the ice shelf.
Although it has not yet reached it, a recent study points to 1.6C as already being a certainty i.e. if All anthropomorphic carbon emissions ceased tomorrow, we will still hit at least 1.6C above the historical average.
@@chrisjones6030 No, its if we continue to emit at the same rate per year at this exact moment. Ie not increasing or decreasing across the rest of this century. If we stopped emitting completely now, a few decades from now the temperature would stop increasing and over time atmospheric carbon would decrease, wed never see 1.5 degrees. But this is completely unrealistic so its never a focus of climate scientists.
@@tlpineapple1 Even if we cease our carbon emissions tomorrow, the methane currently being released from thawing permafrost and shallow ocean methane hydrates due ti current temperatures will still push us over 1.5. It would be nice to think otherwise but...
@@chrisjones6030 You know what, those methane releases were going to happen no matter what because the planet is on a natural warming cycle. All humans did was speed up the inevitable by what is in geologic terms an insignificant time period.
I'm not near the coast. I had to leave where I lived in Texas 2 years ago largely because I couldn't afford to live there. I intentionally chose a place to relocate to that is less expensive, but also nowhere near the coast. It was clear years ago that rising sea levels were going to happen. So while I had the opportunity to move, I steered clear.
Since they rise only 15mm a year, you'll be dead, your children will be dead, your grandchildren will be dead, their grandchildren will be dead, all long before the coastlines ever get flooded.
Pity atmospheric CO2 lasts for far more than 100 k years. Methane has worse effects, lasting about 11 years which breaks down to CO2🧨. Whoops, this gear box 🎁 has no reverse 🌊
Besides "sea level rises" some of the biggest things are, alterations to the global Jet streams. Inland rain patterns, droughts, (the effect human engineering has had on water way health), as well as ocean rising we are seeing impacted sea layer behavior changes. Where the upwelling of the cold "nutrient rich water layer" mixes with the upper layer to create this life line convayer belt system that is crucial for ocean health. It's equal to how the jet stream on land controls where places get nourishing rain, or drought's, or mild temperature, or something. We are seeing such a faster alteration of effects to "micro-climates" localized zones then we are when we focus on this "global 2°c measurement" which shows we definitely need to look at this with many multiple perspectives, realize just how different and unique things are depending on where you locally are. Realize that the ways that our past engineering projects were constructed are not meant to function under these new circumstances. As a nation, America needs to approach this as a necessary function of it's government to it's people, just as important as our military is (we already know that we are set and investing enough into our military power tho so we must have multilayered focus here for success) if not it is failing it's people and it's nation as a whole.
Past engineering projects for water ways were also grossly inappropriate in the past. All things are connected, related, to each other--affect each other systemically. It is probable that military is more aware of the consequences of climatic shift than we are aware of--as those outcomes are likely viewed as threats to the security of the nation.
@@lynnepetersen6529 The military is definitely aware, and in fact they have been urging Congress to pass legislation to fight climate change more aggressively. So far the fossil fuel industry is winning the fight though.
@@lynnepetersen6529 yes I totally agree. It's like they built all these water ways that just waste water. We need to bring Beavers back and have waterways that utilize the most out of every little bit of rain and water we get in this tough times. I've lived in Oregon my entire life and it's never been this dry ever! We urbanized places around the nation that should never of been able to support cities. Where they pull water from places just to feed a rich persons house in a place that doesn't have enough water or rain on its own. They turned Florida into a place that was designed perfectly for water drainage and balanced ecosystem and instead they decided to cut things down, build man made canals, just to build some houses in a place that was never meant to have a city built their and now that is very clear. It's just crazy how all those projects they built in the mid early 1900s where they built dams, canals, etc. Are having such a effect on us today and it bothers me how slow and tedious government is being at reacting towards these very important issues. We should have started working on these things over decade + ago but yet we are still nit picking what to do, why we should do it, how much to spend, etc, etc. All this stuff really hurts the lowest income people because we don't have the luxury of options and if our government isn't going to realize that and reach out and help the poor, we are going to see a huge issue occur across the nation. They would rather bail out a huge company, like airliners just because they had a couple days down from a global emergency, they act like those super wealthy assets will go out of business in days, but they don't consider the poorest working class, local small businesses not being able to keep up with insanely unbalanced inflation and cost of living costs at even the lowest level. It's like at least the airliner company has a ton of assets and abilities to start instantly earning tons of money once people started traveling again and get this, if the government helps the poorest people, it will only come back into the economy and feed those big businesses because they will have the ability to spend money and rich companies need average to low income people to survive because they are their customers. Currently enough average people/families are having a hard enough time to pay month to month bills. So if we can improve that, the more will be able to go into the other avenues of the economy. We gotta look at it like the food chain. Nature is directly connected to ourselves, we must coexist with nature for ourselves to flourish. If nature fails we fail because we are nothing without nature. ❤️
Sadly even though it's been realized that immediate action to stop this is needed, people being people, politics, money and lethargy will push us over the edge, that's the whole picture. Were going to see summer weather when people die from excessive heat (already happening) air quality due to forest fires become an issue (already happening) and the heat keeps rising. I'm not a tree hugger but my eyes are open. Enjoy your family and friends while theirs time.
I think for me what is so awful, is that communities that will be the most impacted are the ones that haven’t been offended at all from pollution that’s contributed to climate change. Even if you don’t agree with the polluting that’s happened or are too young to have done anything about it, in the very least if you’ve benefited from it it makes some sense. So many indigenous and poor communities are going to be decimated or displaced from actions by wealthy nations.
There have been some Native American reservations that have already been essentially displaced with the land mostly flooded. The people have adapted (they've raised their houses). I would have appreciated if this had been mentioned in addition to the people who are moving. From what I remember, they have been offered better land but our history has made them distrust and its also their land. I appreciate the message but there are those in worse straits. Please do more research and look into more of those affected and how the message can be affected. Am I supposed to be moved by someone who's slowly being affected or by someone who is already being forced to adapt?
What are you going to do when super-sized storms or wild fires hit your house on stilts? Or what will you eat as more farms become deserts and the inland water tables are depleted by irrigation? Read real science papers, stop trying on political hacks for information, they have agendas all about gaining present day power, not long term viability of America.
@@katiehettinger7857 I do not live on my reservation and mine is in South Dakota. I was pointing the information out because there are not just reservations that have been affected but many other low-lying towns and areas affected. There are several docs going over how they are adapting, why they don't move, etc. The information is out there but they put out a comment on a low income area while showing a middle class neighborhood and single spokesperson for that area and a records and science person explaining how said spokesperson was affected. Am I supposed to feel sympathy and want to learn more or am I supposed to be confused and feel a bit frustrated at the "spokesman" they used to try and gain my sympathy. I was giving constructive criticism. Unfortunately as far as people not moving from those areas go... I REALLY can't say. I'm not them nor their tribe or in that position. I can say from experience that when it comes down to it, the Government and large businesses do still tend to screw over the Native Americans, but while I think that's horrible I blame those tribes just as much. They have much more at their disposal to help make informed decisions then they have in the past, its their responsibility to make sure they use it. It may have taken till 1968 but hey we have rights now... its our responsibility to use them. (That 1968 was a total call out and political dig).
when you look at area sizes and quantities, ie, oceans , water and ice, then throw in displacement etc you figures for total sea level rise are way off, you then have to throw in variables such as subsidence and land rise as well erosion then you come up with a very minimal amount of rise , compared to the whacky 250 foot max and 2 meter rise figures, the truth will get you further than lies and whacky exaggerations.
Maybe visit the Netherlands or come here to Paraiba, Brazil where I live. The ocean has risen A LOT in the last 20 years. So much that some houses have been abandoned already and entire streets near the coast have been destroyed. There is no exaggeration. Perhaps quite the opposite, the predictions are too soft comparing to the real damage being done.
@@RafaelCavalcantePaulino so it rises in certain areas alone, that's not how water works, . think about tectonic plate movement, each land mass move horizontally and vertically, , as with most areas effect , usually subsidence is the governing factor , take Miami for instance , the suburbs that are effected are all built on a drained swamp or wet land, , we learnt abut that practice with Venice and its construction, but hey we never learn and blame things on anything but ourselves :) regards
But that IS how water works. Take a cup. Fill it up. THEN put a bunch of ice cubes in it. Did the water spill? The ice is not already there. It is coming from land, displacing the water with its mass, and finally adding to the overall volume. Sea levels WILL Rise. It is a mathematical certainty. You denying what they are telling us is what got us here in the first place.
my biggest dream as a kid was to one day live in a beach city, sprawling with life and culture and community, and it makes me sad that these same dreams and experiences will be taken away from our future generations .. im afraid for the new normal
@@saylahvee especially not when they are being lied to this bad about climate change and everything else. i mean our dollar has lost 99% of its value and youre worried about our kids not having oceanfront property? climate change is a hoax and the weather is always changing. there is ZERO proof climate change actually exists. i would be more worried on whether our kids will own their own home at all given the new slogan is you will own nothing and be happy.
Just remember, oceans were approximately 600 feet higher in prehistoric times than they are today. You're not stopping it now outside of another ice age.
Climate change is a natural occurrence, with zero input by man. Our job is to adapt, just as evolving civilizations have done for eons. This political propaganda is just to take our money, and keep us stupid.
If it were something that happened over thousands of years, it wouldn't be a problem. But there's a lot of danger to ecosystems, plants and animals, if things change too fast. See coral for example. Life will survive of course. The earth has been through something like 5 mass extinctions/ecosystem collapses in it's history, based on geological records, but I wouldn't want to live through one.
Here's a question that I've been wondering about all this concern about the ice melting and raising the seas.. what about all the millions of tons of silt , dirt, rocks, sand and all the other stuff that gets dumped and washed into the seas? It's got to have a impact. Maybe it's not as much as I think it does but I can't help but think it has a major helping factor ofbbthe seas rising. Take a 55 gal barrel, fill it half way with water. Dump a big shovel full of dirt and it raises the water level... just curious...
@@bradthompson5383 Google how much sediment the Mississippi river dumps into the gulf of Mexico. Then think about all the other rivers, creeks, stream and tributaries. Plus land slides, volcanoes and debris that goes in as well. I can't help to think it's got a huge impact on the levels .
I believe that if each individual on this planet make the conscious decision to use less and less of what we know is contributing to global warming it will help to stop the rising sea levels.
30 metres is actually only 40 years away, according to the latest IPCC report. It also said whatever the ppm for C02 is in 2025 it must not go above that, and by 2030 we need to decline C02 by 43% - if we want it to stay below 1.5C. We know this is not going to happen, so based on nothing or little happening, we get to a 1.5C rise by 2035 and 2C by 2045. By 2050, the target year for the world reaching zero C02 use, we could be at a 2.5C rise with runaway climate change tipping points setting off.
Unfortunately the northern hemisphere is heating up faster than the global average. By the time the global average gets to 1.5, the northern hemisphere will be nearer to 2.
I find it very telling that many of these comments in this thread say something like 'my area won't be affected' or 'I'm smart and moved' Only thinking about ourselves is what got us here.
Only thinking about myself is what will keep me here buddy I don't know you so good luck
@@GodsSon5000one day you will have to face whatever saw fit to let you exist on this planet and you will have to explain why you were worth it
@@lului1456 lol God put me here, that's who gone send you to hell for calling him Whatever Connie Chung
@@lului1456you are a fool for even thinking that anybody can save somebody from God doing, he is doing this, I'm focused on saving my own soul not some strangers trying to figure out how to fix what God has determined to destroy ignorant lady
@@lului1456 do you have any daughters I can use
War. Weather induced famine. Sea level rise. These are the drivers that will make this decade the decade of the refugee. Just the beginning.
Blame white people
Lowering sea level is Mathematical and the cheapest method to address rising sea level, also reduces CO2 ppm atmosphere by method.
Naive people who believe in climate change will give power to evil ideologues so they can “fix it”. The same people who murdered Gadaffi and created the economic migrant crisis flooding Europe with Africans and Arabs. Stupid people believing idiotic “science” produced as propaganda, those people are going to kill billions and pretend it was a good thing. Because some liar in a labcoat will tell them so on PBS.
Very few people have a clue of what will transpire before the end of this decade.
Extinction of most life on the planet
Sea level rise takes a long time to accelerate relative to a human lifetime. Sea level rise rise refugees are going to remain rare for a while. Then they will grow exponentially.
Just curious, doesn’t the removal of trees and land from coastal areas to build homes also have an effect on the coast?
I am gonna sell my car and buy a boat
Yes it does, tree roots help keep the soil in place and prevents erosion
@@AliciaOnlineGameplay I’m not saying there aren’t any other factors, but the buildup on the coasts can’t help the situation. Furthermore, the harvesting of trees which absorb water and continue the water cycle is detrimental to an already fragile ecosystem. Trees also provide shade, absorb CO2 which feeds to climate change. I say stop cutting down forests and encourage more adaptive measures for a cohesive life with climate
Yes, coastal flora like mangroves keep the soil compacted and act as a barrier for incoming tides, slowing them down.
In their absence, there is more erosion of the coast, plus waves and tides reach much more inwards
@@maureenjacobs3697 Someone needs to tell our climate czar (tyrant) nitwit John Kerry flitting around the world in his wife's private jet that planting trees does not remove carbon from the earths carbon based life forms. Everything that holds carbon in living cells will release it when these living things die. You people are not very bright are you?
It is true that releasing sequestered carbon creates more life and if you consider life to be pollution then go live in the Sahara although the worlds dead places are all being threatened with abundance - holy shit run for your lives.
Lived in South Miami for 30 years and 3 years ago I moved to the mountains of North Carolina. The area I lived in was constantly being flooded so I packed my stuff and got out of there.
yeah people have no clue that the Sea been rising for over 1000 years
@@Dave-vy8wg yet they get scared and feel they can change the course of nature
The last ice age ended around 15,000 years ago if I’m not mistaken. Since then the planet has been warming and the ice has been melting/‘retreating’. It’s still happening. It’s earths destiny to warm and cool. Mankind has just sped it up a little. All the wacko’s on both ends of the argument is what makes it more confusing than what it is. And yes, we should limit burning ‘fossil fuels’ because honestly, who the hell wants to breath that crap into your lungs if there’s an alternative. And yes, that is a major contributor to climate change. Full disclosure- I am a gas guzzling largish(38’) boat owner so I’m smart AND I’m guilty but I’m not ignorant. Own your truth.
@@Dave-vy8wgit makes a huge difference if you are hit by a car at 3 mph or at 30mph. Yes, sea level was rising but we massively increased the rate. This is all on top of the “natural” sea level rise. When you talk to Denise like you they point out the very slow increase since 1900 but they never actually take a look at the decal increase which shows that it was increasing way slower in 1900 and is massively picking up speed.
At some point real estate prices in these areas are going to plateau, and then it will start to hit home ( pun intended ) how serious and irreversible sea level rise is.
Enjoy the view from the mountain!
My way of coping with living near a coast was to move to Arizona instead, where I can enjoy the dryness of a megadrought instead. I kinda joke...but it sorta felt like a pick your poison scenario.
I genuinely do not think there's a chance in hell this world has the fortitude to actually do anything to thwart climate change. We just got through two years of people screaming that a mask is oppression. Think how they'll react to significant changes in their lifestyles.
The truth is, none of these disasters are going to happen. Nothing happening without climate is unprecedented.
Arizona is burning again the Tunnel Fire is out of control with very little chance at this point of getting it under control anytime soon with the fire fighting aircraft grounded due to high winds. I’m a snowbird getting ready to head back to the Great Lakes and for another year I’m worried about wild fires being a problem getting out of Arizona.
@@steve-ph9yg you will always find disasters when you look for them.
@@roberthicks1612 I’m looking for my way out of a state with 3 wild fires and two main highways out running west to east one the Tunnel Fire is right now north of I40 and spreading fast last night it was 30 square miles and grew 6,000 acres overnight with another fire burning near Albuquerque NM the only pass through the mountains on I40. It was two years ago that the route I take from Mesa to I40 at Holbrook I had to go through Flagstaff a much farther way the area of this fire the fire by Kingman is terrible but doesn’t affect me it’s hundreds of miles west of me. I don’t look for disasters like you said I can find them anywhere.
@@steve-ph9yg The only reason we have fires like this is they choose to do nothing to prevent them. There are places where people are threaten with being arrested and sent to jail if they do anything to prevent wild fires. Geologist say that in past centuries, there were wild fires bigger than the state of Arizona. The difference is that they happen so often and with nothing to stop them that they ran though the under brush and burned it off, leaving the trees to recover naturally.
In order to have them under control, they have to put in fire breaks and do back burns periodically, but the liberals refuse to allow that. The result is that when they do start, they are almost impossible to contain.
The only difference between current disasters and ones in the past, is speed we learn of it.
500 years ago, you would only learn of a major disaster if it was in your region of the world. That might take many months or even years for you to hear of it.
300 years ago, you would hear of it within months due to ships travel.
200 years ago, you would hear of it due to telegraph services within a week.
100 years ago, you would hear of it in the newspapers the next day.
50 years ago, you would hear of it on the nightly news.
25 years ago, you would hear of it in hours.
today, you can watch it happen on live streaming.
I find it interesting that in most of the world, it's the poor who will be most affected, but in North America, it's the wealthy who tend to live ocean-front.
it's so pretty....till it crashes in on you.
That's because the wealthy KNOW IT'S A LIE. Barack Obama hasn't bought anything but OCEAN front property since he left office. But that doesn't mean anything, right? The Four Seasons just built an ultra chic resort in the Maldives, that island chain that was supposed to be submerged by now, according to the climate hoaxers like PBS. And why does no one hold Al Gore accountable for his utterly laughable predictions about Manhattan and Miami??? Check Tony Heller's channel on here on rumble for the details of how these people LIE about "the science".
@@cavaleer You are so delusional. Ocean front property is the hottest, a good investment now and maybe for 20 years but slowly it's eroding away. Rich people don't care, but sell it before buyers catch on. Its one face real estate sellers don't talk about as it's big bucks.
The best property is of course on the high ground, with a great view, but still with ocean front property included - how else could you have those beach parties?
Rich people (i e. the lords of the land) will always push the poor out, just as showed in the video. Their landlords just increase the rent, until the poor can't afford it.
There is not a but the first part of the sentence is 10000% true in North America as well.
We need to clean these areas that will be under water otherwise toxic stuff will poison the ocean. For example, nuclear reactors, garbage dumps, industrial chemical plants
That's more like it. prepare for the worst.
i'm sure desantis will be right on that.
!!!!!!
They won't be under water because this is a propaganda video used to push the climate scam and bad politics on us. Sea level rise is about 7 inches per century and steady. The rest is fear mongering crap about ice that isn't going anywhere.
@@alexanderson4582 It's a scam. This video is propaganda.
Here in Rio, Brasil, we hardly had a winter season. It was stifling hot (May thru September 2022). Now that is early Spring (Nov 2022) we are experincing unseasonal cool weather. In the southern sierra of Brazil we even had a snow fall for the first time in history in early November. Beats me!
It's called weather, it changes. The planet is not warming.
What scares me is this is happening in every corner of the world
@@torqingheads Weather can fluctuate in our times. Climate is a different story. The glaciers in the Alps are melting fast. When I was a child over 50 years ago, those glaciers were big. Now most of them are gone, and what's left is tiny.
@@samreh6156 Glaciers advance and retreat and there is a lag, for every retreating glacier that you know of somewhere another is advancing. The corrupt govt/ scientist/ media cabal will hide from you the truth . CO2 historically has followed warm periods not caused them. According to NASA the earth's mean temp is steadily falling.
Climate change is climate instability & climate extremes.
Food production relies on reliable weather.
8 billion people will be impacted.
We live in the Global Food Distribution century.
We also live in the Age of Information.
Ignorance is a choice.
As a Miamian, I cannot wrap my head around how no one seems to even worry about this. they keep building and building and this place is gonna be underwater before 2030
talk witcher guvner! deathsantos!
i don’t get it either everyone will keep building down here until they literally cannot anymore
UGY KELL NEKIK, 50 ÉVE MONDTÁK MÁR A PROBLEMÁKAT A PARTON, DE MÉGIS...
One thing I did not get is why in this report they mentioned that the people that own beachfront property will be able to sell their property for top dollar. But who's going to buy a house underwater...Aquaman?!
@@Drought-jr6pb sell it now before you need goggles to fix breakfast in the morning.
Northern California climate change sufferer here - last 3 of the 4 years I've had to evacuate due to threat of wildfires and/or power shut off for multiple days by power company for wildfire prevention. Praise God I've always had a home to return to. More and more I notice fluctuations in the weather - hotter earlier than expected in the season, winters with no rain for extended periods of time only to follow with 1-3 days of extreme rain. It's a crazy time to be alive.
@ Julie Ann
Did you know a live red laser beam aimed at Sonoma County showed up, quite unexpectedly, on a live earthquake map? Those fires were/are intentional. The rolling blackouts that occurred in CA, years back, were found to be caused by Wallstreet shutting down the power in one place and then another, selling the energy. It's all planned and intentional. Just like if/when this comment is removed.
Stay safe out there, thankfully I’m in central Massachusetts where we haven’t had any major problems yet
"crazy time" is this geologic time, where gravity might fail us
I hear you. I’m a Southern Californian. I lost my home to a wildfire. Before that happened, I lost my childhood home (we didn’t live there anymore). My friends and family members have lost homes too. I finally moved due to climate change and that was 12 years ago. It’s just getting worse. I saw the change, it’s a bad drought I keep hoping things will return to what we saw as normal. I miss my home state so much. But I couldn’t live with the fires anymore.
Here in Sweden I've noticed we had alot of snow when I was little and then we had green winters, now the winter comes months late and alot of snow in a short period then it quickly goes away and our summers are dryer and more wildfires.
I unfortunately had to drive through one a couple of years ago, wasn't fun.
I live in the country mentioned by the glaciologist Kiya Riverman in the video: Bangladesh.
I have to live in fear every day - not because climate change is happening - just because almost all my neighbours and family members (including my parents & spouse) are strong climate deniers. I am all alone with this ultimate climate fact in my knowledge, and I cannot convince them to start thinking to relocate to safer ground before it's too late. I cannot move alone, while seeing them suffer from the consequences. What I should do!!
I am so sorry to hear this, Mohammad but I can understand it in some ways. Very few people are excited about change and so as a species we are very good at denial. We do not want to see or understand things that make us uncomfortable and so we look away from the multiple discomforts that climate change is producing and will go on producing. For those of us who are logic minded, it can seem unbelievable that others are not grasping the damage that we have done to the earth, that is changing the climate. Unfortunately there is not a lot you can do but, you can be patient with your family and friends and help them see the changes that are already occurring in your country, especially the ones that directly impact their lives, their jobs and their ability to improve their surroundings. I would also encourage you to educate yourself around the psychology and sociology of humans as intelligent persons have done amazing research into those topics. Perhaps you will find more insights that will help you convince your friends and family of the gravity of the crisis that is occurring and will only get worse. I am glad that you are so thoughtful and are concerned about those around you as that is something to be celebrated in a world that seems increasingly centered on the individual and not on the whole. Good luck my friend.🙏
I have friends and family that are the same way even though you can see some of the changes with your own eyes. Crazy
Find work in Nepal , Bhutan type of areas where elevation is 20 meters higher. And move your family . Pray for these things to happen in the Name of Jesus and it will happen . Set your mind to this goal . Pray this for 3 weeks and tell me your story.
GEOENGINEERING..not climate change.
Okay, so far you have not convinced your family to relocate, BUT you can show them the scientific evidence and keep on bringing the topic to their minds. If you want someone to do something more, make it EASIER for them. Simple graphs? Photos? A little demonstration with ice in a bowl of water? Keep trying. And meanwhile, YOU find a feasible new location to attract them away from the coast. You CAN do this, Mohammad.
I'm from Florida, Tampa and Miami. I left 40 years ago, but still return on a regular basis to visit friends. The rising water in Miami is obnvious to me, particularly in places like Matheson Hammock, Crandon Park, and parts of Miami Beach. I now live in Los Angeles. Years ago I would go RV camping at McGrath State Beach in Oxnard, CA. Now the park is closed because of constant flooding in the (former) camping area. So for me, it's real and now. At least my home is 140 feet above sea level, so this neighborhood is not at risk, as with most of LA. I got rid of all the methane appliances in my home. And I drive an electric car (not a hybrid), so I have a much lower carbon footprint than most households here, or anywhere else in the U.S.
The St. Adreas vault will be your undoing, my friend.
The water in Biscayne Bay is about 5 inches higher than about 50 years ago. I grew up at Matheson before that. It flooded then. add five inches. Global rise is at about 2.3mm per year and varies but that average is over 100 years old. This video is BS gaslighting to make you scared of "climate change" We are currently in an interglacial period and we will return to cold. There is nothing man can do about it.
Living on South Florida waterfront since 1999. Just sold my house to move inland to SC.
While I never got flooded the high tide in the canal clearly got higher over the years to the point that it now reaches the top of the seawall within about an inch. That puts the house 2ft above high tide now. It's only a question of time...
It's amazing and pretty terrifying that you have actually been able to track the rising ocean during your lifetime like that. Did you move because of that?
@@RyanWalshGuitar It is part of the reason; the others are 7 hurricanes, bad drivers (many without insurance), crime, crooked contractors and generally rude people. Ah yes, and ridiculously overpriced real estate.
Same here, but not to SC. The beach erosion is so insane now. I remember being a kid and the beach went out so far, now there's barely any beach left. A few years back, I think it was hurricane Matthew, washed out part of A1A which is a major beach side road and it took the city a couple years to rebuild it and set up seawalls. So sad
I feel bad for the new homeowner, but also, you did what you had to do. I don’t blame you at all
People, do a little research. There are areas that are, how can I put this, not going to be as badly effected. Michigan is one. Probably the Great Lakes acting as a buffer.
Yes, I live in Michigan.
That doesn't mean no effects here. At the least Michigan needs to gear up to take in lots LOTS of climate change refugees.
Oh, the Michigan legislature and most local governments are solidly controlled by Republicans. So I don't see the compassion kicking in the way it needs.
Love being a Bangladeshi in this awful timeline of the universe where we produced 0.09 percent of the world's carbon emissions but now we are the ones to go underwater first. Also love watching people in western nations still bicker about whether or not climate change exists while my house has been starting to go underwater since before I was born
Somebody in your family at some point should have considered moving.
I'm sorry for your struggles dude (or dudette). It's not fair on you guys. I'm fighting to get my corrupt government to do something about climate change but they are paid by the fossil fuel corporations to pretend nothing is wrong and block all renewable energy projects. Election soon so hopefully the bastards will be voted out and my country can start doing its bit to fight the coming apocalypse.
@@danusdragonfly6640 Do you even KNOW where Bangladesh is?
@@Kiyoone Yep. I am fairly good with geography and study geopolitics as well as different religions, customs, archeology, paleontology, plants and animals. Do you have a serious question?
the close neighbors of China and India aren't entirely blameless either, they have the opportunity to use the catch up effect and really minimize their emissions but instead opt to invest in the same 100yo tech that causes this.
What do I think. Saying "Communities of color" and "the poorest" are effected the most is shooting yourself in the foot WRT encouraging action on climate change.
The second you say that, you've lost the attention of most people in the richer nations.
The focus needs to be on how climate change will negatively effect those most responsible for GHG rise.
These PBS psychos are racist nazi leftists.
Just some more racist BS propaganda clouding an otherwise great conversation about climate science.
It's just a fact. The poorest are always most affected. That's how capitalism and any society works.
Another brainwashed disciple.
If we can't find solidarity with the poorest communities in our society than we won't ever fix climate change. The richest will always make excuses for themselves so it's better to just be honest and present the full picture.
I think this needs to be broadcast daily. I recently talked to a few coworkers and they had no idea that this is happening. They are kind of climate deniers anyway.
its not happening its fear mongering. global warming doesnt exist its fallacy. everything theyve ever told you is a lie
If this was broadcast daily, people would "get used to it". They'd get tired of it. Then they'd ignore it. Not a good idea.
Climate changes. The only thing that warms or cools the earth are the sun and occasional volcanoes. Mankind, even with the unimaginable amount of pollution caused by China and India (combined population, greater than 3 billion and counting, ie just under 50% of the global population), has no affect.
@@davidh9844 love to know there is someone with a brain out there...great comment man
Floating ice that melts has zero effect on water levels. Fear mongering.
Here in the South of New Zealand, there has been what they politely call unseasonal weather. The suspended fences along coastlines where farming is practiced are common. Erosion to the landscape is becoming more evident and serious. Runoff is polluting our waterways. People talk about the heavy storms and flooding as if they were expected and compare them to other times when it was much worse as if by saying that, it's not so bad. Personally, I can feel an ominous background vibe of forboding and am looking for land inland with an altitude above 400mts above sea level away from the coast. I am trying to convey the need for preparedness and scientifically backed up information like this presentation encouraged.
Weather is always "unseasonal" [sic] or we would call it the climate. Climate is what you expect; weather is what you get.
We are living through Don't Look Up
No worries, as long as you settle at least 10 to 20 m above sea level, you should be safe for your life time - 400 m is a bit of an overkill, since around 70 m is the most that sea level will possibly rise, on average, and that would still take at least hundreds of years. And we don't know how many species (perhaps including ourselves) we might have killed by then.
@@qvintuse.urvind7002 the entire planet is dying, and I'm supposed to take that as a condolence?
@@asherplatts6253 Yes, don't worry, be happy. Also, don't look up, for Mars or other planets. Look down at the fertile soil and the sea, where life comes from. This species of ours will go extinct or evolve into a new wonderful world with biodiversity, peace and prosperity. No worries.
Anyone else think that the increase in warming has become exponential instead of a slow steady increase.
It is very serious smh
It's not even a question to me. Temperatures, at least where I live in the Bay Area (California), have risen exponentially and are becoming more erratic. One week might have normal temperatures for this time of year (80-90 degrees) and then we'll have a week where we have to stay inside our houses for fear of having a heat stroke because it's 114 outside. I've never seen anything like this before and I'm dreading the rise in heat that will probably be inevitable due to a lack of change to decrease greenhouse gasses. I'm 21 and I'm not expecting to live past 27 because by then in 2028 the world might not be a place I can survive in.
Mother Earth is resetting herself
No, nothing close to it. You clearly don't know what exponential means.
Sea level rise for example is hardly higher than a kerb stone in the last 300 years, and temperature has barely risen either .
We simply hear more about things now
@@resse2001 well girl i’ve read an article that said that the sun is closer to earth. So it means that the earth is getting closer to the sun, but since i read it, it literally disappeared.Might be that, that is also a cause for this climate change.(i’m not saying that it’s the main reason, but A reason)
If everyone could stop being led by greed, and actually thought abt the future of our world, then we could do so much to counter this. Unfortunately, I don't see that happening.. the rich always want to b richer..
The other part of that is that the rich think their wealth will somehow protect them. They can always move, buy what they need, fortify themselves, etc. The fact is, they will be among the first to die.
Got that right
@Glennsten Bergkvist that's irrelevant to the point of my statement.. but ur correct. Some rich ppl do that..
@Glennsten Bergkvist The rich do what they do for selfish reasons. Wealth is taken. It is created by workers. They create the prosperity that the rich enjoy.
The rich are unnecessary. They are poor stewards of our limited resources. And they are driving us to the brink of this disaster for their own purposes. They are in control and they could stop this if they were benevolent as you propose. But the truth about the rich is that they are not special. They are not better. They are human. And greed will drive them to the end of the Earth, and the rest of us with them.
What is you solution?
As with all of these issues it comes down to who do I believe? Should I listen to the people who understand what is happening ( e.g climate scientists and flood victims) or should I go with the pig I saw flying past my window this morning ,who told me there's nothing to worry about?
What is incredible,is that about one third of this country(republicans), does not believe in climate change.
The pig isn't collecting money from the govt for grants to study climate change or improving the value of his stock in solar, windmills and electric cars. Sure climate changes and has been since the beginning of time but if politicians were really concerned they wouldn't be flying all over the country every day. While the US is going crazy with wind mills China is building coal fired power plants as fast as they can.
Me from the Netherlands will have to deal with the consequences for sure and very soon. Being active in R&D into renewable technologies, I see that we as society cannot make the target 1.5C and most likely not even 2 or 2.5C. I see very little change in behavior measured in various EU studies pointing to any real change. So let's us all prepare for massive change for our children and their offsprings.
Obviously haven't read many of the newer ones then because the trend has reversed and the thinking is that we ARE going to prevent 2.5 and that catastrophic climate change has been averted but if we want to avoid the worst of the effects, we have to make more changes quicker.
you gonna have to deal with nuclear fallout as putin helps us rid the world of the israelie kkk empire
The 1.5 deg C target is TOTALLY artificial, ITS MEANINGLESS !
Thats direct from the professor at the Potsdam institute who INVENTED the target for the IPCC.
In his interview he explained HE had been approached by the IPCC to come up with a figure (for propaganda purposes) HE did not research and publish this as a study.
He explained to them that what they wanted was scientifically meaningless, but they insisted
and to use his words he just plucked 1.5 Deg C OUT OF THIN AIR !
When you live within a socialist superstate like the E.U, its hard to come to grips with the reality that the media AND the government lies to you on a daily basis about some things and are acting AGAINST your best interests, yet they are.
Most of what you think you know about this is wrong.
I remind you that the Minoan warm period was around 4 Deg C WARMER THAN NOW, the Holocene warmings were WARMER STILL, in fact if you look at the peak warmings
over the last 8000 years they have been getting shorter and cooler as we move toward now.
The Medieval warming was almost certainly a bit warmer than now, they still cannot grow grapes in the U.K as far north now as they did then.
The massive changes your government have in mind for your children are NOT for their benefit, the political agenda is laid out clearly in Limits to Growth p 1972 by The Club of Rome, which is an organization set up by the Rockefeller family owners of Standard Oil,
who set up the UNEP AND the IPCC, and are the IPCC's primary advisors on environmental issues.
The Rockefellers are one of the planets most ruthless and unprincipled capitalists.
I suggest if you want to get some ACCURATE perspectives on this issue contact CLINTEL.
Because right now YOU are a danger to your grandchildrens future out of sheer gullibility.
@@peterjones4180 How about a source other than: "Just trust me bro".
@@sirkana I NEVER ask for references and i never give them.
My perspective is shaped by scientific papers, books by scientists and speaking directly to scientists some of whom have worked for the IPCC.
How about YOU list everything you think is wrong in my comment and we can take it from there.
IMO, we're screwed. I'm not going to live to see the worst of it but my daughter and grand daughter will. We've failed them miserably.
You missed the story line. Your kids will all die, count on it.
Even the best scientists can't see all the twists and turns. We don't know what will happen, that's how the future works. All we can do is our best, teach our children and grandchildren to be analytical thinkers, involved in the political process and long term planners. They may build the world we dream of because, rather than despite off climate change.😉
@Older than dirt Don't have to worry about the climate.... Vladimir Putin is going to launch Global Thermo-Nuclear War soon... climate will be the least of your worries. I don't worry about climate or global warming at all anymore. Putin has cured me of worrying about climate and global warming.
@@robertwilliamson6121 Ha ha I've been saying this for years, these nitwit snowflakes obsess over .01 degree "perceived" temperature variations but are clueless as to the real "glow-ball" warming threat - 50 million degree fireballs the size of a city.
Presumably, however, we will kill each other with nuclear weapons beforehand.
“How bad are we willing to let it get?” Well climate deniers are not even acknowledging the problem so, sadly, there’s the answer.
Honestly, even if I did NOT believe in the contribution of mankind to the problem, I would have enough common sense to ask myself, “What if there is even the SLIGHTEST chance that it could be true?” At that point it becomes a gamble with the welfare of my children, not me. Selfish ignorance.
I'm not a climate denier, but my question is why would President Obama buy ocean front property. Why do I have to make drastic changes when elites have mcmansion and fly frequently. Society is a heat engine and climate change cannot be reversed
@@matthewm9261 : Because President Obama can afford to liquidate ocean front property as easily as he acquired it? I don't know but you seem certain enough about it to risk the welfare of your children. Good for you
@@pjesf I live in a 2 bedroom apartment and my carbon foot print is nowhere as big as others. I don't understand why there isn't a push to end to air travel and eliminating air conditioning. We know the eroi of solar panels are a joke and you can't run a modern economy on renewable power
@@matthewm9261 : "A push to end air travel". No one is talking about plunging mankind back into the stone ages. As long as fossil fuels are encouraged then there is no incentive to move away from them.
GOP would be happy with NO emissions standards and nothing along those lines. And it's not JUST fossil fuels - it's recycling and deforestation. I drove route 66 through the midwest and had to haul my recycling through 6 states who can't be bothered with it. It's attitude. Selfish attitude.
@@matthewm9261 : You don't want to be inconvenienced; I get it.
I grew up in Hialeah in the 1950s. I could dig a hole in my back yard and hit the water table within two feet. The highest point in Dade county is a "hill" in one of the parks that is less than 11 ft above sea level. You have problems with septic tanks and sewers because the water can not flow downhill. The east coast of florida is a limestone shelf that runs north and south along the coast the land gradualy drops in elevation to the west. 40 miles west of the east coast the elevation might only be two feet above sea level. I think Miami and the everglades are doomed. Growing up in Miami in the 1950s was very nice. There were a lot fewer people then and a kid could go down town on his own. I miss that era.
Thank you for sharing that Richard.
I've lived in The same area in and near Los Angeles all of my life and I see the changes too. I grew up in the 60's.
We are currently in a Mega drought which is defined as a drought lasting 2 decades or longer. This is year 22. This mega drought started in 2000.
"Since 2000, the average soil moisture deficit was twice as severe as any drought of the 1900s, and greater than it was during even the driest parts of the most severe megadroughts of the past 12 centuries, say the authors." Adapted from a press release by UCLA.
i try to live an environmentally friendly lifestyle, but it feels like it's never enough. society's greed will doom us all. have a great day everyone
Join others, vote Green politicians into office, use mass transit and if your area laks good transportation for all, the harass them with others until they meet your needs with zero carbon vehicles.
Societal greed and overpopulation. We call ourselves an intelligent species yet repeatedly fall prey to the basal desires instilled by billions of years of evolution - get more and reproduce. Pretty hard to fight against that.
In Portland Maine we see both Gentrification AND sea level rise effects. King tides regularly flow backwards through storm drains and flood low lying inland areas, AND workforce housing is being demolished to make way for million dollar condos on the water. It is truly insane.
Maine is going to feel a tremendous squeeze when the working class no longer has any place to live to staff the resorts and clean the condos. My husband and i left in 2018 to move to NY for work and haven't looked back. Combined with how completely uninterested Mainers are in literally any changes at all (you should have SEEN the responses i got when i surveyed people about coastal geohazards for school), i can't imagine the future looks great there.
I will believe in climate change when billionaires stop buying beachfront mansions.
@@stephenkalatucka6213 You realize that to a billionaire a million dollar mansion is like buying a $1 Arizona Iced Tea to somebody who has $1000 in savings?
My mom has a place in Machias. "Million Dollar condos"!! There is some humor there. Land in Aroostook may be the best bet? The problem with individual parcels is coastal roads will be flooded at so many points, and disappear. Imagine Bay of Fundy plus 3 feet!! Maybe land up off the Airline, hwy 9 from Bangor to Calais will be safe?
@@timisaac8121 They are saying over 100 inches of sea level rise. That's more than 3 feet by quite a bit.
I'm in Amsterdam, which today sits at sea level, polders around sometimes are over 10 feet below. All protected by several BN worth of flood protection. We won't suffer yet, though over 7 feet seas rise probably will do us in. Yet they're still building in the lowest polders, some 20-24 feet below.
But that's still all very long term, our greatest concern is drying out of the North Africa and middle east, which will bring 10 millions of refugees. That could happen within 10-20 yrs, even quicker if another major food growing area is hit by megadrought, now Ukraine and South Russia are almost of the market for 2 years.
Very true. A 7 foot or 2 meter rise in sea level will cause billions (with a B) of people to have to leave where they are, from either floods or droughts, causing the hugest refugee crisis ever. These will be very desperate people, who have literally nothing to lose. It won't be something that any country or community can avoid by somehow keeping "them" out.
At the current rate of sea level rise (assuming there is no cooling between then and now) it will take 1423 years to rise that 7".
Moreover sea levels are between 1-2 meters LOWER now than they were only 4500 years ago.
@@peterjones4180 "At the current rate" is the sticking point. As the global average temperature rises due to our current carbon and methane emissions along with the immeasurable future methane emissions from the thawing of permafrost and undersea hydrates, "the current rate" is expected to increase dramatically.
@@chrisjones6030 You need to study the physics a lot more Ch4 is NOT going to make any difference, H20 vapor is 97% of the atmospheric greenhouse gases it absorbs long wave IR in the same band widths mostly as Ch4.
Those bandwidths are MOSTLY saturated.
This is why the Medieval Warm Period, Roman Warm Period, Minoan Warm period,
and Holocene Thermal optimums, did NOT create the effect you fear, neither did the preceding two interglacials which were both much warmer than our current one.
If it did not happen at the much higher temperatures in the HWP, MWP, RWP, its NOT going to happen now.
What you are looking at is a natural cycle.
Likewise human Co2 emissions are LESS than 4% of the annual Co2 emissions into the atmosphere or MORE than 96% of the annual Co2 emissions are from non human sources.
Co2's greatest warming effect is at 20 ppm, with every subsequent doubling of Co2, the additional warming produced DECREASES LOGARITHMICALLY.
Co2 is mostly saturated and has very little ability left to add warming.
Co2 ALSO absorbs IR radiation in mostly the same bandwidths as H20, and so also for that reason is mostly saturated.
When you look at the paleoclimate record
its very clear the amount of Co2 in the atmosphere makes no difference to the temperature, we have had massive ice ages with 4000 ppm + Co2 and high temperature periods with very LOW Co2 levels.
Co2 levels have very POOR correlation to
the temperature record, solar variability on the other hand has EXCELLENT correlation
to the temperature record.
Moreover the ice core series show clearly that its NOT rising Co2 levels that drive up temperature, its RISING TEMPERATURE that drives up Co2 with a lag of 800-1000 years.
Higher Co2 levels NEVER prevent subsequent cooling, indeed Co2 levels continue to rise for some time AFTER temperatures have cooled.
@@peterjones4180oceans are taking up over 90% of warming, hard to notice - as yet. Slight temp rise does melt the frozen-to-bottom underside of these glaciers, around all of Antarctica. When they get loose, we will start to see some extra rise. Still take some 100s yrs to do that 7 feet, but over 1000, not.
If you are concerned about them sea levels of bronze age - pyramids didn't even exist, let alone, this modern interconnected global economy, where war in Ukraine means Africa won't get no wheat and can no longer afford fertilizer - essential component K mined in Ukraine, with such economy so easily disrupted, rising oceans are the least of your concerns. We'll be fighting over food & water within 30 years, making the current wave of refugees seem a 4th July party in comparison .
If you do think the old, not the future sea levels are relevant, the last time we had this level of CO2, mid Miocene or so, sea levels were some 100+ feet higher. Those levels, co2 and seas, took eons to rise. We got to 420 ppm CO2 in half a century, half of emissions after 1990. Your little car drive to the mall, makes co2 level rise by 1ppm, in the cargo volume of a modern container ship, over 22000 cubic meters. Take a guess just how many of those drives are made around the world, each day. Plus all factories, planes, ships, plus plus plus. Things are looking up, mister.
Sorry to break this to you Dr Michael Mann, but 1.5 degrees is gone. It would take massive carbon removal on a scale that we can’t (won’t) do. 2 degrees C has serious implications but is a achievable target to aim for.
I hope people read this. As a Northerner I am well aware of how ice melts. In the spring it seems like it will never leave even as the temperature rises. Then you see it gets a little soft but it still won't go. The next stage it changes color, gets slushy and it's all gone in 2 days. If we wait for slush, it's too late. Thank you @pbs
Here we call it "rotten ice". It looks ok on the surface, but step on it and you go right through it.
But amazing enough it returns every year.
@@AORD72 Irony so clear it's impossible to miss ! 😨
@@AORD72 That's "climate change" for ya. Tell the Marxists in Washington we need them to ban summers in order to save our -precious bodily fluids- ice!
The real thing you’re going to miss is how much carbon tax money you pay out and how that money is actually used to improve the climate!
My houses basement never flooded until last winter, when the snow melted and it rained the same day.
Now, it’s flooded 3 times total since then.
I live about a mile from the coast , near Boston.
Life is gonna get scary , fast, for a lot of us living on the coasts.
Yeah, a lot of politicians thinks climate change is just hotter summer. But in reality it’s more like extreme weathers, certain areas get exceptionally large amount of rainfall while some areas gets drought. Summers would get crazy hot and winters get freezing cold. That stirred up heat exchange also creates more hurricane too
@@hughlachesis8020 More and more intense hurricanes too. Imo things are pretty screwed already and people should prepare for disaster that is coming. We aren't stopping the warming; we can't even agree on basic scientific facts in the US. (for those in US)
@@hughlachesis8020 exactly. Climate change means having to budget for a basement water pump, and having to figure out how much longer you have in the current house before you need to move.
Basically, making the poorer poor.
I’m thankful I live near Worcester, I feel bad for everyone on the coasts
@@hughlachesis8020 It's not just the politicians - who probably don't really think that way, but are likely getting campaign donations from people making money on the status quo. In much larger numbers, it's average people - those who do not have science degrees, and maybe didn't take a lot of science in high school or college. Average people need to be shown how this is happening to them, using what they or we see all around.
I know it seems hopeless with all the world’s most powerful people ignoring the issue. But please know that not only can we avoid the worst of the crisis, we can still avoid many of the more “minor” negative effects! We’re getting to the point that it is cheaper to use reusable energy than coal and oil! Yes there are wrinkles to iron out, but we are at a point now that was unimaginable 12 years ago. We can’t give up, not now, because that’s exactly what big petroleum wants.
Stay safe everyone. ✌️🕊☮️
I love how they talked to people who are being forced out of their homes due to rising rent yet the crew stayed in an airBnB. The lack of awareness in that one is ironic.
People can get offended by Literally ANYTHING…🙄
This is why I got the heck out of Florida. I owned a house, sold it and took off. I'm in north central alabama now, 600 ft above sea level, i'll be good for a while
When winter in Riverside California included 100% temperatures, I moved my family to Oregon. Some of us are able to read the handwriting on the wall. 👍
In India, southern part, this year we just didn't experience winter as we used to just 5-6 years ago. There was a cold wave in Northern parts but it did little to cool off temperatures and that too for just a week or so. Now we are experiencing heatwave after heatwave right from the start of February. I'm scared to think what's going to happen in a decade or two!
Woah, I wasn't tracking the temps there, that's crazy!
We don't live on or near the coast, but I'm sure people relocating will affect us. Our season shifts are noticeably altered already. The unpredictability is a majoor gardening and agriculture challenge.
Really you're seasons have been changing your full of it.
@Jim Bob
You can ignore reality, but I guarantee that reality will not ignore you.
It’s now possible in 5 years. Can you do an update video? Scientists say the glacier is hanging on by “its fingernails”
It's finalized. Completely adrift
I moved away from the coast a decade ago because of this. The models being too conservative was already being discussed online and I lived in a hurricane prone area. No way I was dealing with an increased chance for a cat 5 hitting me.
@ Adam Pope
Smart move, you have my respect, sir - From me, living on the East Coastline. My trust is in The Lord to get out in time, should something occur.
God bless you 🙏🙏🏽🙏🏻
LOL! How many CAT 5 hurricanes have made landfall in America? Has there been ANY change in the average number of hurricanes per decade or their intensity since records began? NO! The only thing that has changed is our ability to detect and study them. You need mental health treatment.
Same. Was living off the coast of NC and that place is quickly becoming a hot mess due to climate change and capitalism so made the choice to move mid west.
@@JynxeeKat lol same. I was living outside Wilmington. I looked at future sea level rise and at three meters my house was going to be river front property. I used to think that three meters wouldn't happen in my lifetime but after seeing all these ice shelves collapsing, I'm beginning to think that we're in the midst of a modern meltwater pulse.
@@ax14pz107 I lived in Jax for 15yrs. Yeah we both know what’s up. Every new storm brings a huge host of problems. Lots of peeps don’t realize the plethora of farming communities in and around the coast as well and how it adds to other issues! Nothing like having fecal waste ponds over flowing everywhere. Yeah I’m enjoying life in the Rockies.
And the fossil fuel industry is not being held accountable for any of these catastrophic changes.
We the fossil users are equally to blame. If we stopped using it, then the supply chain comes to a screeching halt
We need to hold the Democrat party responsible for reparations for being the party of slavery first. Who do we hold responsible for the stabbing death of a young girl, is it the steel makers, the knife manufacturers, their distributors, or their retailers?
That tool you are tapping on was made with petroleum.
Are you innocent? Have you used electricity or ridden in a car during your life? The climate change doesn't come from them pumping oil. It comes from everyone USING it. Go look in the mirror for the "Guilty Party" that needs to pay.
@@georgepoitras3502 That's like saying the drug dealer isn't partially responsible for your addiction .
Your argument is untenable.
@@tr7b410 You CLEARLY stated that is was THEIR Fault. No. We all share the blame. If they should pay to fix it, no one is innocent. We all used that power that was generated. Including you "Evolved" beings that went to college and got brainwashed into forgetting you used to leave lights on and used heat and AC and drove. Get off your pedestal.
I think a rise of 2°C is barely realistic, more likely its going to be 3°C. I dont think the world will work together rapidly to reduce emissions enough. Some countries might try, but some others wont, which in turn makes the efforts of those that are doing something less popular among its people. Its a typical tragedy of the commons scenario.
Particularly those countries that have a different focus, like catching up to the top 10% of wealthy countries dont want to be kept away from this due to climate saving restrictions. And countries that have a focus on war or religion (and at times this seems to even include the USA, honestly) also have climate not at the top priority.
Scientists say the entire atmosphere could ignite and the Earth could become another sun unless we become socialists in the next month or two. Elon Musk is selling space on his rocket ship to Mars which will be warmed to a pleasant Florida beach temperature by its two suns. No time to lose
Where did you get your degree in climatology and what studies have you worked on?
@@katiehettinger7857 And what about you. What are your accreditations?
Well undisputed evidence will be far more likely to prove it.
We don't need to get discouraged from thinking about what other countries won't do or will do. What matters most is what citizens of the United States do. We are the biggest consumer per person in the world. Once we change our lavish lifestyles of "buy buy buy" and delivery of goods "now now now" and shift to a circular, services-oriented economy it'll be easier for other countries to follow suit. Maybe then they'll aspire to develop economically in a way that mirrors the more humble US lifestyle.
The ocean is 40ft from our deck. Next door is an 18" high seawall built in 1976, the water isn't any higher than it was in 76. Someone that doesn't understand tides and king tides and how they are influenced may be fooled but here in south Fla the average level isn't changing. 25 years ago Al Gore said south fla would be under water and the polar ice cap would be gone by 2016. Here we are in 2024 and I believe he invested in solar, wind mills and passing out govt grants to study climate change.
It does not look like the collapsing glaciers are going to stop melting. Maybe it would be a good idea if humans rethink the way that they presently live. It might be a good idea to take a lesson from the people who have been adapting to rising sea levels for the last 100 years. The Scandinavians have built dams and built floating houses which seem to be some of the answers to how we can survive rising sea level rise better.
The sea level rise wont be a factor for several decades, houses can be raised, sea walls can be built , homes right on the beach in already low lying areas need to except the risks. Too much fear mongering in this video. Its not like the water is going to flow in like a tsunami. Will humans even be around in 100 years, I'm thinking maybe not .
Not gonna happen babe. Our species is narcissistic and parasitic….
Global warming and ecosystem destruction are accelerating at an exponential rate. Resource depletion and population and consumerism will prevent any meaningful remediation. We are going AWAY. VERY SOON. We will be gone before most of the sea level rise. Food and water are already becoming an issue. THEY will never tell the truth.
@@stridersmythe8860 I agree with you on the fear mongering in this video. Human caused climate change is extremely ropey once you look past the mainstream rhetoric.
Will humans be around after 100 years, of course.. in what numbers it's a little unclear..
We've been on this earth in our current form far longer then we've been told. Civilisations come and go with cycles that our common society fails to recognise.
A lot of these cycles are governed by our sun.
Pole reversals, Grand solar minimums come along and change up our world almost like a clean slate. Humans always survive because we are so intelligent and adaptable.
Our current issue is a corrupt globalist cabal, holding humanity back so as to remain in power.
We have solutions to a lot of the challenges we face, we just need to push these parasites out of the way and start uniting and creating a world we all want to live in.
@@stridersmythe8860 I just read something else that it said could be 3-5 years … I’m having a panic attack
Underground volcanoes. National geographical said that there's about 91 volcanoes underneath the ice 19 are active and 3 are very active. This article was published about 10 yrs ago.
Nobody will talk about the main causes which are totally out of our control, because it won't make money. The moon isn't slowly leaving Earth's orbit. The Tonga hunga volcano didn't erupt causing millions of tons a green house water vapour into the atmosphere. The Sun's 11 year cycle and solar flares have nothing to do with warming the Earth either. If people just did their own homework and educate themselves to understand that nothing stays the same in the universe. If you dare speak the truth to the narrative, Super AI might learn something they don't want it to know. Cheers Blessings Alan 🙏.
Human activities have a significantly greater impact on global air quality compared to volcanic pollution.
.
Human activities, such as burning fossil fuels, deforestation, and industrial processes, release around 36 billion metric tons of carbon dioxide (CO2) annually. In contrast, volcanoes emit about 0.3 to 0.36 billion metric tons of CO2 per year. This means we would literally be waiting for 100 years of worldwide volcanic activity to match just one year of human impact. This comparison is a dead horse that uneducated politicians with corporate dollars in their pockets continue to feed the masses.
Additionally, human activities contribute to other pollutants like nitrogen oxides, particulate matter, and sulfur dioxide, which have significant health and environmental impacts. Volcanic emissions, while they can have localized effects, are relatively minor on a big picture/global scale.
And of course in addition to the rising seas, the increased heat levels are going to affect people who are very far away from any ocean. It may very well be that summers in some locations are going to get so hot that people will literally die, and if / when that happens, there will be significant migrations literally for survival from those places too.
@LoneRider perhaps, but the mass migrations will still need to happen. How will new land be appointed to dislocated people? Who will have the right to a new land and who won't? Huge potential for conflict here.
And we wonder what happened to the Mayans, the Incas, Anasazi pueblan natives & more. We are in stage 5 per Mayan Calendar.
@LoneRider People look to the past to much when it come to climate change but nobody is looking at where we are at today. During the previous climate shifts we did not have ticking timebombs located all over the planet. An example is the 450 nuclear power plants that will go into radioactive meltdown when they either get hit by tsunami or they no longer have trained humans to keep refrigerators running. Nuclear power plants are just one example there are many other toxic chemical plants etc.
It may be that temperatures will increase to where Siberia and antarctic regions become liveable; i wonder if that liveable land increase might he greater than the submerged coastlines?
@@rogerjohnson2562 It's not just the actual amounts of land that are important here, because we still require dock facilities along coastlines regardless. If these are overwhelmed by rising oceans then we're still in trouble. And I'm not sure how good the formerly frozen locations would be for growing crops either, for example.
Here in Vancouver the rich are all lower levels and beachfront (Richmond is build on sand banks, of all the stupid ideas...) while the poorer families are forced to live further in on the mainland on raised elevations. As such, the flooding will affect those who caused it the most.
They are rich and will just move. Simple
If sea levels rise by 30ft, I'll be living on a small island. The nearest town will be mostly gone, other surrounding towns will most definitely disappear beneath the waters, the whole area will be fragmented with hilltops turned into tiny islands.
This is actually starting to happen now, as the river through the town has gone from flooding once every few years to flooding a few times every year.
Maybe we should look into buying a boat.
IF...
@@jaybee5794 They will, according to the scientific consensus, it is just a matter of time.
I live in New Orleans. In Louisiana sea level rise has already contributed to increased flooding during storms. All of southern Louisiana is basically flat so there is nothing to slow or stop the water as long as there is pressure pushing it onto land. As hurricanes increase in intensity as predicted more and more communities will be rendered uninhabitable due to massive storm surges. Even in the past few years damage has increased dramatically; places that haven't flooded in the past have been inundated up to 40 miles inland.
Increased flooding can happen for many reasons, quite normal in high tides for water flowing from land to disperse more slowly, it's like pushing up against a heavy truck. Remember the ides of climate predictions, no ice in Artic by 2015, then again by 2018, Maldives under water 2018 ..none happened ...on to the next scare story ..of a 1.5-2 feet increase in Louisiana sea levels by 2050... far enough away to create a "now" stir, but far enough away for those that made the predictions to have disappeared quietly, when it doesn't happen.
umm they built the city under the water line from day one..what do you expect?
Louisiana gets a double impact.
Because not only is the sea level rising, the ground is also sinking due to geological processes.
I live on the water and have 60 years. It hasn’t raised an inch. You people are cookoo
The cascade ice cliff failure has romped inland over 100km inland from the no longer in existence ice shelves on the coast of Thwaites and Pine Island. This has dumped the hydrostatic pressure head on the massive volcanic field extending from the coast to the central West Antarctic rift by thousands of PSI. There is more geothermal water outbursting from beneath the Glacial channels than the Amazon in peak flood.
East Antarctica and Greenland are behaving in exactly the same fashion.
It's tipped into a runaway exponentially accelerating blowout, and we can expect global catastrophe within 5 to ten years.
The scientific community is decades behind. They are talking about ice shelves that are no longer in existence, and misrepresenting basal outbursts from the interior as seawater erosion.
Nothing can stop or slow these exponential continental geothermal bore blowouts.
Grindup baker is an ignoramus who is lying that you can trust Google Earths images.
The European S1 synthetic aperture radar is the only clear images available.
It sees right through cloud, has a 40m pixel resolution, shows frozen water as white and radar absorbent earth and wet surfaces in dark shades.
For scale 1 degree of latitude is about 112km in these images.
Use the low bandwidth browser and go select last 3 days or a week.
They are no longer publishing the last 24 hours images of sensitive areas until a few days later.
If you don't monitor them every few days like I do they are no longer available after a week. www.polarview.aq/.
I do find it funny that folks seem to ignore the massive West Antarctic Rift System and all the volcanic activity there. I can't say I've heard about the change in pressure increasing melt there, but its certainly interesting and something I'll have to look into. After all, the Jokulhaups of Iceland show firsthand how volcanism can locally melt quite sizeable quantities of ice. iirc, Greenland and West Antarctica are by far the most dangerous, as Greenland is very susceptible to climate variation and West Antarctica is generally pretty low-lying and reasonably far north. East Antarctica, thankfully, is pretty generally stable and has been frozen for tens of millions of years, well before the Quaternary Ice Age began (which humanity seems to be making a damn big effort to end). But Greenland and West Antarctica certainly hold enough water to cause quite the mess for humanity already.
A FÖLD ÉL ÉS MOZOG, NINCS RÁHATÁSUNK EZEKRE AZ ERÖKRE !!!!!!!!!
Can you cite at least one scientific paper or credible source for this information?
Very interesting info. But if you say "the scientific community is decades behind" and say something that goes against the mainstream message of the scientific community, and if you want your post to have any clout while making such a bold claim, I'd think you should provide sources or state your credentials. If you want your comment to be taken seriously that is. Otherwise, I'll assume you're a Russian bot trying to stoke hopelessness and inaction and you probably don't want that. :p
1 year later and we have breached 1.5C over last 12 months. Last 3 months has been 1.7C.
Water, water everywhere yet not a drop to drink! Droughts are happening just miles away from the floods.
Speak on it😅
I don't think we have a chance of doing anything to slow it down. There are a lot of people that are doing their part to cut their footprint, but a lot more people that don't even try. The conversation has been going on for about 30 years or so now with very little action from most people. By the time those people figure it out the Oceans will have risen 30 feet. Then it will be too late to slow it down let alone reverse it.
You better check yourself in. You could have a mental problem!!
People will deny the unknown...which is synonymous with death.
@@kirstinstrand6292 there are things that occur around the world that change coastlines occasionally. what he's speaking about is not climate change. if you understand climate change you have to take a large area of country and check the the temperatures .because that's where they started .until they realize people were doing research .and then they had to make it be climate change .you see back in the seventies they had said we were going to be frozen over by now !!now!! they're saying it's climate change!! they need another narrative !the people behind it are world government !!they need your money!! They need you to think alike!!!! to support world government.. even the pope is behind it if you'd understand prophecy you wouldn't be confused about it !!!..the Bible tells us what these people are going to do!!!! notice they just passed a climate change tax on you and !!!you're paying for something that doesn't exist! that ought to please you!! if you check the records of a large area like lake Michigan from the 1800s when they first started keeping record ..of it.. the lake froze over once back in those days ..that let you know how cold a large area is.. it froze over four times or better after that since 1976 ..thats definitely not climate change.. based on temperature ..that's where they started.. so you can stay blind if you want.. to and get behind people that support it ,that ends up stealing your money ,from your pocket, and your freedom in the future, to bring you into a socialist world government system, because that's who's paying for it ,I've studied this for 30 years, they will not pay a climate scientist .if he says anything different ....wake up.
@@kirstinstrand6292 you got to remember what he's saying there they started that stuff in 1980 something and they said we would be flooded by now I checked the sea levels they haven't risen one inch on the coastlines anywhere if what happened that he says would happen we would all be dead by now since 1980 ..you see they got the chicken little story going here, in here believing it.
@John Like a real smooth brain, yeehaaa!
Even in places along the U.S. West coast where homes are high above sea level up on the cliffs, those cliffs are suffering sped up erosion as a result of sea level rise. It doesn't matter that they're significantly higher than sea level. They're sill going to be impacted by this phenomenon.
A few years ago I went to see singer Steve Lawrence's house up for sale in California beach front. Not that I could afford it. He had invested a million $$ building a sea barrier to keep the house from flooding. Still, it had a $10M price tag. I hope the price includes a snorkel.
Many houses are already falling into the ocean, some in Sonoma County, some in Pacifica and other places. Sea level rise and soil erosion mostly to blame. I remember a Geology professor in college saying that our society overbuilt on the coasts because of a sort of Goldilocks period where climate and weather near the coast was more stable and climate change had not yet made itself felt. He said watch and see what happens as more storms and weather events decimate cliffs and ocean moves farther inland. This was before we were even talking very much or knew very much about climate change
@@glendabarton45barton48 That 15mm yearly rise isn't doing jack shit to impact the coasts.
Pandemics viruses
@@glendabarton45barton48 and the reason coastal regions will loose ground only reason the coastline of all countries is highly populated was for the trade routes we don’t have to rely on that as much with our technology in transport but people still all gravitate to the coast it’ll just shrink for some and gain for others
Thank you for keeping these short and digestible. Well done.
I live in the intermountain West where we’re in the midst of a 1200-year drought. It’s so wild to me that I may be driven out of my home bc of a lack of water, while someone else is driven out bc of too much water, and yet, the root cause is still the same in both cases (human-driven climate change).
We humans sure do have a talent for screwing things up, don’t we? 🥺
I say shame on the souls creating us. But at the same time, we are the faces and bodies of these souls, so this is the point of waking up.
Yeah were pretty stupid......😭
Humans made the Kardashians famous....need I say more?
I live in the Netherlands. We go blub blub if waterlevels rise rapidly. A big part of our country is well beneath sealevel as it is. So a rise of 2 meters will be interesting to say the least. Especially with springtides. We seem to have a government that isn't all that keen on taking drastic measures. It is frustrating at best. And we are world renowned for our waterworks. It is strange to see that it doesn't seem to worry our politicians all that much. We are driven by economics. But if we don't take action the economic impacts will only get bigger and bigger. We have had a drought that is quite insane. With rivers running dry and prices flying through the roof because of it. A lot of goods are shipped over rivers in Europe. And a lot of ships couldn't travel or could only take a 1/3 to a 1/4 load because the waterlevels were at record lows. I think we are in for some tough times. And this summer is just a prequel. Thank you for the information of this video. It lights another side of Climate change.
I expect that by 2050, there will be over a billion climate refugees around the world with nowhere to go.
What I didn't expect is that such troubles will also *already* be affecting poor people in our own country.
And there will be over 5 billion angry right wingers crying about those migrants, even though their own inaction and stupidity is what created their problem.
This is nonsense. Refugees from what? Rising sea levels? Just move back a few paces if the seas rise.
@@marksouthern7542 Sea level rise and temperatures that are too hot to survive. Think about what you just said though: over half of humanity lives near the coast.
What happens when all of them need to move. That billion I mentioned, which I can cite studies about, are the ones who don't simply have a place they can move to.
@@AvangionQ If the rate of sea level rise doesn't escalate, then the maximum height of sea level rise will be approximately 300mm over this century. Last Century it was about 150mm. No problem to deal with this amount of sea level rise. It is easier to manage heat than cold. The cold kills many more than the heat. Many places on earth will benefit from 1C of warming. Think of Canada and Russia for example. Over the last few centuries the world has been greening and crop yields are up due to more C02 in the atmosphere. However, the overall trend of temperatures has been downward since the Holocene high stand. If you want my prediction, I suspect we are now heading into a colder period until 2035 (ish).
@@marksouthern7542 300mm? Try six feet by 2100. Some places will have over ten feet sea level rise. Yes, it's not an equal distribution.
Only takes two feet of sea level rise before we start seeing migrations. No wonder you weren't worried. You didn't know how bad it's gonna get.
Thank you for covering these issues 🙏
so a scientist that worked on the UN for sea levels says that the ocean hasnt risen at all in at least 100 years must be full of crap ?? come on people stop listening to this junk
"the last hours of ancient sunlight" explains all of this in much greater detail both data regarding past cultural behaviors and the causality behind it and our current situations. Personally I live mobile, an Rv that's solar driven for a host of reasons, this being 1 of them. As far as I'm concerned, the consciousness shift needed to Change all of the actions that has set our demise in motion won't happen until its well to late.
The solar cells move your RV about the planet? Did they build it too? Can you explain?
I agree. Human nature. We won't make necessary changes until there is much suffering. Sadly.
@@brucefrykman8295 climate change, areas of conflict, high population during an issue, localized problems of any kind... These events where its advantageous to leave are 1 of my focuses where being mobile vs being planted (in a house/apt etc) is ideal. So let me give an example, Louisiana or having to leave a country (Ukraine as an example).being able to have all your things, refrigeration, a roof, electricity etc in evading an issue is the focus. There aren't to many that can evade a storm or what ever and come back if desired, they grab what they can and can carry and likely loose the rest.
There is a 2nd level so to speak where leaving the rv behind if needed is also a path of resolve on my side as well. Not having rent or mortgage is also ideal which is the 2nd main reason.
@@plasmacastorable Living in Hot Springs Village I have acquired many new neighbors and friends fleeing Shreveport, Baton Rouge, and New Orleans, not for the climate but for the crime. All of these places have been controlled by Democrats ever since reconstruction. The weather here is fine and crime is nearly non-existent but then our government at the local, county, and state level is 100% Republican.
@@brucefrykman8295 I knew a accountant from Biloxi Mississippi who had thousands of clients during Hurricane Katrina and other disasters like tornadoes that lost everything. Insurance refused to cover the disasters claiming an act of "God as a outlet" to not pay their clients. You can thank Republicans for that stipulation. Laissez faire and screw the consumer. Unfortunately storms and more disasters like Katrina and the summer of 9000 tornadoes will only increase.
I'm already past concerning myself with rising sea levels, and have moved on to the best places to live to avoid nuclear war. Who's with me?
Move as close to ground zero as possible. You'll avoid all the horrific pain and suffering that will be visited over the entire earth, as a result of a nuclear war.
Switzerland 🇨🇭 is where you wanna be. ✔️
@@johnstone7697 You go first.
I do indeed live somewhere which is very vulnerable to a rise in sea levels. I live right on the South coast of England (UK) and cities such as Portsmouth and Southampton (UK) and the densely populated areas all along the South coast will be badly flooded if sea levels rise very far. There is already a problem with tidal surges, albeit normally on the East coast of England. Low lying cities such as Hull are vulnerable too. After a certain point the tidal defenses for London (known as the Thames Barrage) will no longer be able to cope, and London has a population of over 20 million people.
The Netherlands, Belgium and Denmark are also vulnerable. These are low-lying countries and any significant sea level rise will be disastrous. Coastal cities in Spain and Portugal likewise - Lisboa (Lisbon), Malaga, Oporto, Barcelona etc.
Not to mention cities such as Santiago, Buenos Aires and Montevideo in South America.
Google Earth needs a "Sea Level Rise" slider, where you can use it to show the sea level rise...
Dunno why they have to make it about race when it's almost always class related. Poor white people are just as affected as poor .
And rents go up all the time. it's called gentrification. It slowly spreads. I live landlocked and they are constantly pushing people out of places for more "fancy" stuff. If water just rises, all of the developed land won't just suddenly grow sand and become a beautiful beach. NOBODY is thinking that far into the future or even caring so as to buy out land that will be "seaside" long after they are dead.
Answer: #2 - We are doomed to a warmer world.
I used to make a living as a Ski Instructor. As recently as the 1990s I'd ski from Halloween till Independence Day in the Lake Tahoe area.
I'm a climate refugee. I moved from the CA Central valley which is getting hotter and dryer every year to the CA north coast. My new home has also been severely drought afflicted
I'm sorry to hear about your situation. Did you actually decide to move because it just got too hot and dry?
@@RyanWalshGuitar As I grew up we observed hotter and hotter temperatures and less and less rain. The main industry there is agriculture which is very water intensive. Tree nuts and fruits and dairy. Many people there are lobbying to import water from other regions but those places are also experiencing severe drought. So yes I moved because of not seeing a long time horizon of viability of agriculture as normal in the area.
@@misaelramos83 With the water levels at Lake Powell, Lake Mead, and most of the California reservoirs at very low levels, I think we are very close to a point where drastic changes to agricultural practices in the southwest and California will happen. It is already forcing governments to institute temporary programs that pay farmers to fallow fields, but I am betting that it will have to go much further into forcing changes to less water intensive crops in certain regions, and forcing changes in irrigation practices. With about 80% of water in the southwest going to agriculture, the farmers are going to be squarely in the bulls eye for changes in water use.
I live in CA central valley, and am afraid of the coming summer. This area will be forced into growing less water intensive crops. Almonds use too much water, and these almond orchards are everywhere.
@@cynthiacole6140 One thing I've observed as a Tulare County native is that the microclimates where citrus orchards are planted in the Sierra Nevada foothills were one of the first to change. This was like 10-15 years ago too. I remember Kevin Ramer on KMPH talking about how either it was gonna get too cold and destroy citrus as it formed or as it became later on, not enough cold enough nights for the fruit to set from buds. I've been away for years now so I no longer know the details.
There is a lot of focus on sea level rise, understandably, but people need to understand that this is a problem you cannot run away from. Change and loss of biodiversity alone is going to be devastating to everyone
Thanks for an interesting article. I have very little expectation of a sudden outbreak of good sense. The worst of us are doing everything they can to slow change and do what has to be done. I especially like the look at the Antarctic and how the glaciers and ice shelves "work".
It wasn't until 50 years ago that scientists even got around to actually mapping the entire continent so claims that they understand what's happening or how the ice shelves work are ridiculous.
oh look, more doomsday bs. lemme guess, these are the same folks who helped Al Gore and his "inconvenient truth" crapshow over a decade ago with its "all the coasts are going to be underwater !!!" climate change nonsense. smh, shame on you hucksters
@@nobodyspecial4702 According to them plenty of places are supposed to be under water already they just hope we forget about their claims about the Maldives being underwater before 2015 and New York under water by 2013.
@@zjeee who exactly said that? It certainly wasn’t scientific consensus
Excuse you for injecting RACE into climate change. I get that you kids today think everything revolves around race, it doesn't. Frankly quit a few of us are sick of hearing u insert it into every aspect of daily life. I tuned into this to learn about THIS subject, not to gear a kid turn into racial issue. The harder racial stuff is pushed the more I tune it out. Whiny kids aligned with race baiters to create yet another reason to complaine.
Keep in mind that properties will lose their value long before the water actually rises. When it’s obvious that sea level is going to rise properties along the coast are going to lose value.
I ❤️ this channel. It scares me to death but hiding gets u no where.
Wait until an asteroid hits.
@Christina Sombutnark Don't have to worry about the climate.... Putin is going to launch Global Thermo-Nuclear War soon... climate will be the least of your worries. I don't worry about climate or global warming at all anymore. Putin has cured me of worrying about climate and global warming.
So let me get this right, YOU like being lied to ?
Why is it that women are so easy to con, using emotional manipulation.
I believe in displacement, a glass of water doesn't overflow as the ice melts.
They discussed that. Ice floating on the sea doesn't change sea level when it melts. But when the ice floating on the sea is forming a barrier that stops the land ice from sliding off into the sea, then the melting sea ice is actually a problem.
There's quite a lot of ice sitting on top of Greenland and Antarctica. Particularly Antarctica. When that land ice slides down into the sea, sea level is going to rise.
@@tealkerberus748 When the ice on the land melts the land will rise do to the weight of the ice being less.
@@ShortBusScotty So Greenland and Antarctica will rise - slowly, over some thousands of years - and as their continental masses take up more space, sea level over the rest of the planet will rise further. That's a slow process though, so most people stick with calculating how much volume the land ice will add, and how much expansion due to heat will add.
Don't buy land less than 70m above current nominal sea level and it's all somebody else's problem.
@@tealkerberus748 I live within walking distance to the Gulf of Mexico. I'm looking forward to water front property.
@@ShortBusScotty if continents float, yes, it'll just float higher. We don't really know, do we?
If you found this intriguing (and kinda horrifying), the book "New York 2140" imagines Manhattan after our worst predictions for sea level rise were exceeded, and Battery Park is 50ft under water.
Yes you do seem to have difficulties determining the difference between replicated scientific results and fiction.
The video falls into that category.
@@peterjones4180 You don't believe in the documentary on this starring Charleston Heston?
@@brucefrykman8295 He he he, no, i understand that was merely an entertainment lavishly funded designed to make its backers large profits.
Like this video.
Did you notice the hugely inflated the ACTUAL rate of sea level rise, from 1.5 mm pa to 3.556 mm pa.
Talk about your water front property 👍
Sadly, I see a 4 degree C rise, and a 15m rise in sea levels.
Try a 10C temperature rise, and a loss of all glaciers on earth, causing a major difference in climate for a few million years.
@@rudra62 is there a betting pool I should know about? Put me down for 14C and 41m.
It is wild that there are so many people still deluding themselves about how severe the impacts of climate change will be. Poorer communities will be hit the hardest, as they always do, but after this pandemic it should be obvious how interconnected we all are and there will be no one who won't be worse off. Probably not even the billionaires if I dare say it.
Yep there will be plenty of rich people that lose everything, all their Investments, fortunes and properties, along with the poor.
Ironically enough those that recognize and face the problem will probably be the least worse off. At least there will be some slight satisfaction watching the climate denying boomers in Florida lose all their belongings to a flood.
*JUST LOOOK at your DeMonic ReLigions;*
*Just LOOOOOOOK at How EVIL & VILE ( ALL ) of you Skuum ARE!!!!*
*I Want to SEEEE Doomsday, by No Later than, JuLy 4, 2022!!!!*
*Of Course I am ONE of GOD's PeoPLe!!! I wiLL SMILE as it ALL HAPPENS!!!*
I have been watching all of this for many years. I made the decision about 45 years ago not to live near a coastline. I went through Hurricane Carla as a child when I lived within 40 miles of Corpus Christi at the Gulf of Mexico. Later, I lived in Long Beach, Ca., which got earthquakes>possible tsunami, plus I took notice of climate change in high school. (Science nerd). Now I live in Central Texas. No place is 100% 'safe', but near an ocean? Just NO.
Highly fascinated in the king tides they are breath taking over here on the P.N.W coast the way the waves hit our rocky coast line ..... they are very dangerous and do give a good output on sea water rise entire beaches are under water during these powerful tides
I'm amazed that people still want to argue that climate change isn't real. I didn't think any respectable scientists still hung onto that.
It not about climate change it is about how much impact humans are having. Climate changes have been far bigger in the past without humans. E.G the melt water pulses 15000 years ago where sea levels changed by 40mm a year. A slightly warmer climate is better for humans. Imagine try to live in a glacial minimum, which due to the forces of the solar system will occur within the next 20000 years. Images the world being 10 degrees c colder.
The Thwaites Glacier is melting because of volcanoes beneath it, not because of climate change. This is reported in journal articles but the news media aren't reporting it.
@@AORD72 climate change, human impact. It's the same in this case. Scientists all over the world are freaking out because people like you want to make it a conspiracy. There are sooooo many things happening, tons of greenhouse gases are put into the air every day. Did you know there is 50 per cent more CO2 in the air than there was 100 years ago? Guess we didn't do that either. I hope you are alive in ten years. Watch what I tell you.
@Glennsten Bergkvist totally with you on the nuclear power. It would be a great time to have it. My own take on future impacts, at this point, scientists have been observing things for a while now. A lot of very smart people are seriously concerned. People will not make the necessary adjustments until it is very late. That's what we do.
Sid, you're a dick. you don't know shit. it's called geological change, boss. that's what happens to coasts
Reminds me of the episode of Gilligan's Island where they thought the island was sinking and it turns out Gilligan was moving the professor's measuring stick so the professor's measurements were way off. Hahahaha.
Destined to be in a warmer and warmer world if without some earth saving scientific discovery that can make some humongous change. People as a whole, the 99% will continue living normally and only making the most basic minimal change possible as they are forced to cope with the environment.
I recently moved from coastal Southern California ( 30 miles from the beach, 200 ft. elv.) to the Sacramento Valley. Now I'm 100 miles from the beach, but it's only 30 ft ASL. Sea level rise has/is going to effect all of the delta! A couple meters will flood SO much of the central valley....
So you will eventually have seaside property again. 😉
Man keeps water out of your area, it routinely flooded a century ago, and unfortunately will again. I'm right up 80 from you, in gold country. We are seeing tree die-offs, and of course fires.
I don't know why, but this felt like a 45 minute documentary 🤔🤷🏼♂️
for me its cause i had to read comments from humans they wrote 7 million times since 40 years ago an it felt like forever to hear the same 7 sentences from 14 billion npc again
@@ShawnJonesHellion ...huh? 🤔🤷🏼♂️
I find it interesting to see that NOTHING is said about the reformation of ice during the winter months, nor the mention of seasonal earth cycles over time.
Be cause it's irrelevant in this discussion.
the sea ice has been measurably less over recent winters so more open water = more heat =more open water . something said.
Immediately I’m thinking, thank god I’m living at 1000m above sea level….but that’s actually stupid.
WE ARE ALL CONNECTED
Just because I’m at a 1000m…I rely on Supermarket, I rely on economic security, I rely on a world that is not at war - Global security
Like dominoes if the whole world order collapses then being at 1000m isn’t going to help me one iota if countries around the world all decide to start launching Nuclear missiles at each other.
WE ARE ALL CONNECTED
The Earth has been going through changes ever since it was created this is nothing new and it's never gonna stop going through changes we just have to adapt
The question is what's causing the changes. What do you think it is?
Jess- the answer is no one knows and anyone who claims to know is not to be trusted. Remember when they said Pluto was a planet….the fact is…it’s all speculation and in classic human nature fashion, there always has to be one or a group of people who claim to have the answers..lol..that’s how we have Jews, Christian’s, Muslims, Buddhist etc etc etc. everyone has their own version of what happened and what’s going to happen…but yet no one can prove anything..just sit back and enjoy the ride.
@@P2Feener305 Jeebus cheese. "They" weren't wrong about Pluto being a planet. There's nothing inherent about what a planet is. That's just a man-made category of astronomical bodies. "They" discovered through time and better technology that there are quite a few bodies of similar size to Pluto in the Keiper belt and created a new category -- dwarf planets -- to include them and Pluto.
That has absolutely nothing to do with climate change. You seem to be arguing that since science made a mistake before (not really in this case, you just don't understand what's going on), you can't trust what "science" says now.
Well, look at what science has gotten right. How about the internet you're blathering on? Antibiotics. Vaccines. Organ transplants. Food stability. Flight. Space travel. Electrical grids. International communications. On and on. Your whole fucking world.
Do those accomplishments of science mean that science is right about climate change? A scientists would of course say no.
That's because science is NOT a religion like Judaism, Christianity, Islam, and Buddhism. Religion is based on "revealed wisdom" -- the theological precepts of the faith.
Science observes the world, develops testable theories to explain what it sees, and conducts those tests to determine if the theories are correct. If subsequent evidence disproves what science had accepted before, what was accepted before is discarded. That ain't religion, buckaroo.
The evidence shows clearly that the increase in greenhouse gases since we began cranking carbon into the atmosphere at the beginning of the Industrial Revolution is changing the climate. Science provided evidence suggesting what the result would be in the 1850s. Even fucking Exxon research in the 1970s showed that increased carbon would change the climate.
You're just another nihilist who believes in your heart that the world will die with you and doesn't give a crap about anything other than yourself and what you "enjoy." You're looking for something to tell yourself to make you feel alright about that.
I know this is a long reply and if you've read it all, your lips are probably tired. So here's the short version: bleh.
There needs to be more legislative change. That's where we should be focusing all our energy on. Midterm elections are coming soon and our voting plays a big part in determining what path we continue to take.
Holding politicians accountable is the only way. At this point, it means holding their face to the grinder. (not advocating for violence). But 13 years from now, we're gonna see famine globally.
Does voting play a big part? Biden didn't even fight very hard to get his big climate agenda passed, and now it seems like it's dead in the water (no pun intended). We may blame the failure of the Build Back Better plan on Manchin and Sinema, but I am pretty sure that if they weren't holding up the bill, some other democratic senator would. I think we need to look further into mass acts of civil disobedience and massive peaceful protests to force the hands of the politicians we have, now!
@@DirtFlyer Our voting does count but I mean congressional and local voting as well. I also agree with you that we don't protest enough. I think we need to encourage a culture of sustainability. Public opinion is our most important tool. Although Biden's bill didn't pass, the head of the Department of interior has been great so far. I don't think this is a democrat vs. Republic problem, it's just that many republicans in rural areas, like to fish, are farmers, etc, aren't being educated enough on how consumerism and climate change is/will affect their livelihood and lifestyle!
@@DirtFlyer sorry for the long comment! In short, I totally agree with you
@@amdonut8091 No worries. I like long comments! I'm prone to them myself! I agree that people need to participate more in state and local elections. Many states are making great strides in making changes in renewable energy production all on their own, without federal intervention. However, I have to say I have lost faith in our federal politicians being responsive to their constituents. I think special interests have a strangle hold on how they vote for legislation, both on the left and right. Oh, and Deb Haaland is awesome too, and a New Mexican!
With the ice shelf melting, would the addition of fresh water to the ocean disrupt the super-salty deep ocean "rivers"? Aren't these deep ocean currents responsible for moving weather patterns towards the north allowing these places to have temperate climates? It seems that rising sea levels is one of many problems this scenario incorporate.
Don't confuse the effects of melt water from the Greenland Icesheet / Canadian Icesheets on the Gulfstream and meltwater from the _south pole_.
It may very well disrupt _some_ ocean currents, but not the one responsible for transporting heat from the Caribbean to the East Coast and Europe, as it's localized in the North Atlantic Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of Mexico.
The North Atlantic Current is estimated to slow significantly by the end of the century - asuch as 45%.
@@beth8775 Yeah, from meltwater of the Greenland icesheet, not the Antarctic glaciers...
Yes. The AMOC (Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation) is slowing down. Climatologist Paul Beckwith just posted a long video explaining all of this.
@@everythingmatters6308 and those guys were suggesting the introduction of large amounts of freshwater could switch off the conveyor and this would trigger a new ice age.
I’m 57. When I was 16 I took a cruise to Alaska. In Juneau, I walked up to Mendenhall Glacier and touched it. 25 years later I return with my husband. The glacier retreated over a mile and Mendenhall Lake was in its place. As a degreed geologist, I was mortified when I saw the lake. As a former pollution control officer for 25 years, I knew that was only the beginning.
3.2C according to Simon Clark (a climate scientist with a UA-cam channel) is what we are on track for. A lot of optimism is required to believe it will stay below 1.5 C 1.5 C required for the ice shelf.
Although it has not yet reached it, a recent study points to 1.6C as already being a certainty i.e. if All anthropomorphic carbon emissions ceased tomorrow, we will still hit at least 1.6C above the historical average.
@@chrisjones6030 No, its if we continue to emit at the same rate per year at this exact moment. Ie not increasing or decreasing across the rest of this century. If we stopped emitting completely now, a few decades from now the temperature would stop increasing and over time atmospheric carbon would decrease, wed never see 1.5 degrees.
But this is completely unrealistic so its never a focus of climate scientists.
@@tlpineapple1 Even if we cease our carbon emissions tomorrow, the methane currently being released from thawing permafrost and shallow ocean methane hydrates due ti current temperatures will still push us over 1.5. It would be nice to think otherwise but...
@@chrisjones6030 You know what, those methane releases were going to happen no matter what because the planet is on a natural warming cycle. All humans did was speed up the inevitable by what is in geologic terms an insignificant time period.
I'm not near the coast. I had to leave where I lived in Texas 2 years ago largely because I couldn't afford to live there. I intentionally chose a place to relocate to that is less expensive, but also nowhere near the coast. It was clear years ago that rising sea levels were going to happen. So while I had the opportunity to move, I steered clear.
Since they rise only 15mm a year, you'll be dead, your children will be dead, your grandchildren will be dead, their grandchildren will be dead, all long before the coastlines ever get flooded.
Pity atmospheric CO2 lasts for far more than 100 k years. Methane has worse effects, lasting about 11 years which breaks down to CO2🧨. Whoops, this gear box 🎁 has no reverse 🌊
Miami's gonna be like Venice in 100 years!!
Thank you so much for covering this!
You're most welcome, Dom! It's an important topic.
@@RyanWalshGuitar it's a myth and you and your religious evangelical mother earth worshipping liars will be proven wrong over time
Besides "sea level rises" some of the biggest things are, alterations to the global Jet streams. Inland rain patterns, droughts, (the effect human engineering has had on water way health), as well as ocean rising we are seeing impacted sea layer behavior changes. Where the upwelling of the cold "nutrient rich water layer" mixes with the upper layer to create this life line convayer belt system that is crucial for ocean health. It's equal to how the jet stream on land controls where places get nourishing rain, or drought's, or mild temperature, or something. We are seeing such a faster alteration of effects to "micro-climates" localized zones then we are when we focus on this "global 2°c measurement" which shows we definitely need to look at this with many multiple perspectives, realize just how different and unique things are depending on where you locally are. Realize that the ways that our past engineering projects were constructed are not meant to function under these new circumstances. As a nation, America needs to approach this as a necessary function of it's government to it's people, just as important as our military is (we already know that we are set and investing enough into our military power tho so we must have multilayered focus here for success) if not it is failing it's people and it's nation as a whole.
Past engineering projects for water ways were also grossly inappropriate in the past. All things are connected, related, to each other--affect each other systemically. It is probable that military is more aware of the consequences of climatic shift than we are aware of--as those outcomes are likely viewed as threats to the security of the nation.
@@lynnepetersen6529 The military is definitely aware, and in fact they have been urging Congress to pass legislation to fight climate change more aggressively. So far the fossil fuel industry is winning the fight though.
@@lynnepetersen6529 yes I totally agree. It's like they built all these water ways that just waste water. We need to bring Beavers back and have waterways that utilize the most out of every little bit of rain and water we get in this tough times. I've lived in Oregon my entire life and it's never been this dry ever! We urbanized places around the nation that should never of been able to support cities. Where they pull water from places just to feed a rich persons house in a place that doesn't have enough water or rain on its own. They turned Florida into a place that was designed perfectly for water drainage and balanced ecosystem and instead they decided to cut things down, build man made canals, just to build some houses in a place that was never meant to have a city built their and now that is very clear. It's just crazy how all those projects they built in the mid early 1900s where they built dams, canals, etc. Are having such a effect on us today and it bothers me how slow and tedious government is being at reacting towards these very important issues. We should have started working on these things over decade + ago but yet we are still nit picking what to do, why we should do it, how much to spend, etc, etc. All this stuff really hurts the lowest income people because we don't have the luxury of options and if our government isn't going to realize that and reach out and help the poor, we are going to see a huge issue occur across the nation. They would rather bail out a huge company, like airliners just because they had a couple days down from a global emergency, they act like those super wealthy assets will go out of business in days, but they don't consider the poorest working class, local small businesses not being able to keep up with insanely unbalanced inflation and cost of living costs at even the lowest level. It's like at least the airliner company has a ton of assets and abilities to start instantly earning tons of money once people started traveling again and get this, if the government helps the poorest people, it will only come back into the economy and feed those big businesses because they will have the ability to spend money and rich companies need average to low income people to survive because they are their customers. Currently enough average people/families are having a hard enough time to pay month to month bills. So if we can improve that, the more will be able to go into the other avenues of the economy. We gotta look at it like the food chain. Nature is directly connected to ourselves, we must coexist with nature for ourselves to flourish. If nature fails we fail because we are nothing without nature. ❤️
Sadly even though it's been realized that immediate action to stop this is needed, people being people, politics, money and lethargy will push us over the edge, that's the whole picture. Were going to see summer weather when people die from excessive heat (already happening) air quality due to forest fires become an issue (already happening) and the heat keeps rising. I'm not a tree hugger but my eyes are open. Enjoy your family and friends while theirs time.
I think for me what is so awful, is that communities that will be the most impacted are the ones that haven’t been offended at all from pollution that’s contributed to climate change. Even if you don’t agree with the polluting that’s happened or are too young to have done anything about it, in the very least if you’ve benefited from it it makes some sense. So many indigenous and poor communities are going to be decimated or displaced from actions by wealthy nations.
There have been some Native American reservations that have already been essentially displaced with the land mostly flooded. The people have adapted (they've raised their houses). I would have appreciated if this had been mentioned in addition to the people who are moving. From what I remember, they have been offered better land but our history has made them distrust and its also their land. I appreciate the message but there are those in worse straits. Please do more research and look into more of those affected and how the message can be affected. Am I supposed to be moved by someone who's slowly being affected or by someone who is already being forced to adapt?
What are you going to do when super-sized storms or wild fires hit your house on stilts? Or what will you eat as more farms become deserts and the inland water tables are depleted by irrigation? Read real science papers, stop trying on political hacks for information, they have agendas all about gaining present day power, not long term viability of America.
@@katiehettinger7857 I do not live on my reservation and mine is in South Dakota. I was pointing the information out because there are not just reservations that have been affected but many other low-lying towns and areas affected.
There are several docs going over how they are adapting, why they don't move, etc. The information is out there but they put out a comment on a low income area while showing a middle class neighborhood and single spokesperson for that area and a records and science person explaining how said spokesperson was affected.
Am I supposed to feel sympathy and want to learn more or am I supposed to be confused and feel a bit frustrated at the "spokesman" they used to try and gain my sympathy. I was giving constructive criticism. Unfortunately as far as people not moving from those areas go... I REALLY can't say. I'm not them nor their tribe or in that position. I can say from experience that when it comes down to it, the Government and large businesses do still tend to screw over the Native Americans, but while I think that's horrible I blame those tribes just as much. They have much more at their disposal to help make informed decisions then they have in the past, its their responsibility to make sure they use it. It may have taken till 1968 but hey we have rights now... its our responsibility to use them. (That 1968 was a total call out and political dig).
when you look at area sizes and quantities, ie, oceans , water and ice, then throw in displacement etc you figures for total sea level rise are way off,
you then have to throw in variables such as subsidence and land rise as well erosion
then you come up with a very minimal amount of rise , compared to the whacky 250 foot max and 2 meter rise figures,
the truth will get you further than lies and whacky exaggerations.
Maybe visit the Netherlands or come here to Paraiba, Brazil where I live. The ocean has risen A LOT in the last 20 years. So much that some houses have been abandoned already and entire streets near the coast have been destroyed. There is no exaggeration. Perhaps quite the opposite, the predictions are too soft comparing to the real damage being done.
@@RafaelCavalcantePaulino so it rises in certain areas alone, that's not how water works, . think about tectonic plate movement, each land mass move horizontally and vertically, , as with most areas effect , usually subsidence is the governing factor , take Miami for instance , the suburbs that are effected are all built on a drained swamp or wet land, , we learnt abut that practice with Venice and its construction, but hey we never learn and blame things on anything but ourselves :) regards
@@accessaryman I get your point but if you study geography of our area here, none of these apply at all.
But that IS how water works. Take a cup. Fill it up. THEN put a bunch of ice cubes in it. Did the water spill?
The ice is not already there. It is coming from land, displacing the water with its mass, and finally adding to the overall volume. Sea levels WILL Rise. It is a mathematical certainty. You denying what they are telling us is what got us here in the first place.
my biggest dream as a kid was to one day live in a beach city, sprawling with life and culture and community, and it makes me sad that these same dreams and experiences will be taken away from our future generations .. im afraid for the new normal
do you honestly and sincerely believe that even with the gross exaggerations of this video there won't be beach front properties being built and sold?
@@jimcrozier3785 the point of my comment is to say that the future is never secured. kids cant dream of a stable happily ever after
@@saylahvee especially not when they are being lied to this bad about climate change and everything else. i mean our dollar has lost 99% of its value and youre worried about our kids not having oceanfront property? climate change is a hoax and the weather is always changing. there is ZERO proof climate change actually exists. i would be more worried on whether our kids will own their own home at all given the new slogan is you will own nothing and be happy.
Just remember, oceans were approximately 600 feet higher in prehistoric times than they are today. You're not stopping it now outside of another ice age.
Climate change is a natural occurrence, with zero input by man. Our job is to adapt, just as evolving civilizations have done for eons. This political propaganda is just to take our money, and keep us stupid.
False equivalence
@@davemccombs Nope.
If it were something that happened over thousands of years, it wouldn't be a problem. But there's a lot of danger to ecosystems, plants and animals, if things change too fast. See coral for example. Life will survive of course. The earth has been through something like 5 mass extinctions/ecosystem collapses in it's history, based on geological records, but I wouldn't want to live through one.
@@davemccombs Reality. The oceans have been 600 feet higher, thus expecting them to remain constant or to lower is stupid.
Here's a question that I've been wondering about all this concern about the ice melting and raising the seas.. what about all the millions of tons of silt , dirt, rocks, sand and all the other stuff that gets dumped and washed into the seas? It's got to have a impact. Maybe it's not as much as I think it does but I can't help but think it has a major helping factor ofbbthe seas rising. Take a 55 gal barrel, fill it half way with water. Dump a big shovel full of dirt and it raises the water level... just curious...
@@bradthompson5383 Google how much sediment the Mississippi river dumps into the gulf of Mexico. Then think about all the other rivers, creeks, stream and tributaries. Plus land slides, volcanoes and debris that goes in as well. I can't help to think it's got a huge impact on the levels .
@@destinationunknown7857 Yes, it does raise sea levels, look it up
I believe that if each individual on this planet make the conscious decision to use less and less of what we know is contributing to global warming it will help to stop the rising sea levels.
True! its just difficult to get people to do that, just read a lot of the climate denier posts here
The planet will be fine,it will heal as soon as human beings are gone.
30 metres is actually only 40 years away, according to the latest IPCC report. It also said whatever the ppm for C02 is in 2025 it must not go above that, and by 2030 we need to decline C02 by 43% - if we want it to stay below 1.5C. We know this is not going to happen, so based on nothing or little happening, we get to a 1.5C rise by 2035 and 2C by 2045. By 2050, the target year for the world reaching zero C02 use, we could be at a 2.5C rise with runaway climate change tipping points setting off.
Unfortunately the northern hemisphere is heating up faster than the global average. By the time the global average gets to 1.5, the northern hemisphere will be nearer to 2.
Runaway irreversible climate change is already in effect.
@@robcook8244 That is true - and scary for someone like me who lives in England!