
-
Exxon, Chevron turn page on legal fight as profits slip
-
Prosecutors call for PSG's Achraf Hakimi to face rape trial
-
Missing Kenya football tickets blamed on govt protest fears
-
India's Krishna and Siraj rock England in series finale
-
Norris completes 'double top' in Hungary practice
-
MLB names iconic Wrigley Field as host of 2027 All-Star Game
-
Squiban doubles up at women's Tour de France
-
International crew bound for space station
-
China's Qin takes 'miracle' second breaststroke gold at swim worlds
-
Siraj strikes as India fight back in England finale
-
Brewed awakening: German beer sales lowest on record
-
Indonesia volcano belches six-mile ash tower
-
US promises Gaza food plan after envoy visit
-
Musk's X accuses Britain of online safety 'overreach'
-
France says it cannot save contraceptives US plans to destroy
-
Russian drone attacks on Ukraine hit all-time record in July
-
Stocks sink on Trump tariffs, US jobs data
-
Newcastle reject Liverpool bid for Isak: reports
-
Cracks emerge in US jobs market as Fed officials sound warning
-
Douglass dedicates world gold to stricken US after 'rough' week
-
Senegal PM unveils economic recovery plan based on domestic resources
-
China's Qin milks 'miracle' second breaststroke gold at swim worlds
-
Swiss will try to negotiate way out of stiff US tariffs
-
US job growth weaker than expected in July as unemployment rises
-
Miracle man Qin wins second worlds gold ahead of blockbuster
-
Budapest mayor questioned as a suspect over Pride march
-
Thai-Cambodian cyberwarriors battle on despite truce
-
UK top court to rule on multi-billion pound car loan scandal
-
World economies reel from Trump's tariffs punch
-
French wine industry warns of 'brutal' impact from US tariffs
-
England openers run riot in India finale after Atkinson strikes
-
China's Qin wins 'miracle' second breaststroke gold at swim worlds
-
US envoy visits Gaza sites as UN says hundreds of aid-seekers killed
-
Steenbergen wins world 100m freestyle to deny O'Callaghan
-
Stocks slide as Trump's new tariff sweep offsets earnings
-
HIV-positive Turkmen man fears deportation, torture
-
India collapse in England decider as Atkinson strikes
-
Outrage grows in France over US plan to destroy contraceptives
-
Rees-Zammit to return to rugby after NFL dream ends
-
England say injured Woakes set to miss rest of India decider
-
Bayer sets aside more cash to deal with weedkiller woes
-
Pakistan inflict more T20 misery on West Indies
-
South Korea's Yoon resists questioning by lying in underwear
-
Stocks drop as Trump's new tariff sweep offsets earnings
-
El Salvador abolishes presidential term limits, allowing another Bukele run
-
Nintendo quarterly revenue surges thanks to Switch 2
-
Swiss to try to negotiate way out of stiff US tariffs
-
British Airways owner sees profit jump on 'strong' demand
-
Sand and dust storm sweeps across southern Peru
-
Battered Wallabies determined to deny Lions a whitewash
CMSC | -0.13% | 22.82 | $ | |
BCC | -1.17% | 82.84 | $ | |
SCS | -1.22% | 10.205 | $ | |
RBGPF | 0.69% | 74.94 | $ | |
GSK | 0.57% | 37.364 | $ | |
BTI | 1.33% | 54.405 | $ | |
CMSD | 0.17% | 23.31 | $ | |
NGG | 1.74% | 71.64 | $ | |
JRI | -0.44% | 13.073 | $ | |
SCU | 0% | 12.72 | $ | |
RYCEF | -2.75% | 13.8 | $ | |
BCE | 1.31% | 23.64 | $ | |
BP | -1.34% | 31.725 | $ | |
RELX | -0.87% | 51.44 | $ | |
RIO | -0.47% | 59.49 | $ | |
AZN | 0.73% | 73.63 | $ | |
VOD | 1.1% | 10.93 | $ |

Dire sea level rise likely even in a 1.5C world: study
Rising seas will severely test humanity's resilience in the second half of the 21st century and beyond, even if nations defy the odds and cap global warming at the ambitious 1.5 degrees Celsius target, researchers said Tuesday.
The pace at which global oceans are rising has doubled in three decades, and on current trends will double again by 2100 to about one centimetre per year, they reported in a study.
"Limiting global warming to 1.5C would be a major achievement" and avoid many dire climate impacts, lead author Chris Stokes, a professor at Durham University in England, told AFP.
"But even if this target is met," he added, "sea level rise is likely to accelerate to rates that are very difficult to adapt to."
Absent protective measures such as sea walls, an additional 20 centimetres (7.8 inches) of sea level rise -- the width of a letter-size sheet of paper -- by 2050 would cause some $1 trillion in flood damage annually in the world's 136 largest coastal cities, earlier research has shown.
Some 230 million people live on land within one metre (3.2 feet) of sea level, and more than a billion reside within 10 metres.
Sea level rise is driven in roughly equal measure by the disintegration of ice sheets and mountain glaciers, as well as the expansion of warming oceans, which absorb more than 90 percent of the excess heat due to climate change.
Averaged across 20 years, Earth's surface temperature is currently 1.2C above pre-industrial levels, already enough to lift the ocean watermark by several metres over the coming centuries, Stokes and colleagues noted in the journal Communications Earth & Environment.
The world is on track to see temperatures rise 2.7C above that benchmark by the end of the century.
- Tipping points -
In a review of scientific literature since the last major climate assessment by the UN-mandated Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), Stokes and his team focused on the growing contribution of ice sheets to rising seas.
In 2021, the IPCC projected "likely" sea level rise of 40 to 80 centimetres by 2100, depending on how how quickly humanity draws down greenhouse gas emissions, but left ice sheets out of their calculations due to uncertainty.
The picture has become alarmingly more clear since then.
"We are probably heading for the higher numbers within that range, possibly higher," said Stokes.
The scientist and his team looked at three baskets of evidence, starting with what has been observed and measured to date.
Satellite data has revealed that ice sheets with enough frozen water to lift oceans some 65 metres are far more sensitive to climate change than previously suspected.
The amount of ice melting or breaking off into the ocean from Greenland and West Antarctica, now averaging about 400 billion tonnes a year, has quadrupled over the last three decades, eclipsing runoff from mountain glaciers.
Estimates of how much global warming it would take to push dwindling ice sheets past a point of no return, known as tipping points, have also shifted.
"We used to think that Greenland wouldn't do anything until the world warmed 3C," said Stokes. "Now the consensus for tipping points for Greenland and West Antarctica is about 1.5C."
The 2015 Paris climate treaty calls for capping global warming at "well below" 2C, and 1.5C if possible.
The scientists also looked at fresh evidence from the three most recent periods in Earth's history with comparable temperatures and atmospheric levels of CO2, the main driver of global warming.
About 125,000 years ago during the previous "interglacial" between ice ages, sea levels were two to nine metres higher than today despite a slightly lower average global temperature and significantly less CO2 in the air -- 287 parts per million, compared to 424 ppm today.
A slightly warmer period 400,000 ago with CO2 concentrations at about 286 ppm saw oceans 6-to-13 metres higher.
And if we go back to the last moment in Earth's history with CO2 levels like today, some three million years ago, sea levels were 10-to-20 metres higher.
Finally, scientists reviewed recent projections of how ice sheets will behave in the future.
"If you want to slow sea level rise from ice sheets, you clearly have to cool back from present-day temperatures," Stokes told AFP.
"To slow sea level rise from ice sheets to a manageable level requires a long-term temperature goal that is close to +1C, or possibly lower."
H.E.Young--AMWN