TY - JOUR
T1 - Climate change projections of sea level extremes along the California coast
AU - Cayan, Daniel R.
AU - Bromirski, Peter D.
AU - Hayhoe, Katharine
AU - Tyree, Mary
AU - Dettinger, Michael D.
AU - Flick, Reinhard E.
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgments Comments by David Jay, Douglas Inman and two anonymous reviewers were very helpful. Thanks to Martha Coakley for data processing and analyses. Funding for PB and DC was provided by the California Department of Boating and Waterways and for CH, PB, MT and DC by the California Energy Commission PIER Program. MD and DC were also supported by the USGS Priority Ecosystems Study and MT, MD and MT by the NOAA RISA Program.
PY - 2007
Y1 - 2007
N2 - California's coastal observations and global model projections indicate that California's open coast and estuaries will experience rising sea levels over the next century. During the last several decades, the upward historical trends, quantified from a small set of California tide gages, have been approximately 20 cm/century, quite similar to that estimated for global mean sea level. In the next several decades, warming produced by climate model simulations indicates that sea level rise (SLR) could substantially exceed the rate experienced during modern human development along the California coast and estuaries. A range of future SLR is estimated from a set of climate simulations governed by lower (B1), middle-upper (A2), and higher (A1fi) GHG emission scenarios. Projecting SLR from the ocean warming in GCMs, observational evidence of SLR, and separate calculations using a simple climate model yields a range of potential sea level increases, from 11 to 72 cm, by the 2070-2099 period. The combination of predicted astronomical tides with projected weather forcing, El Niño related variability, and secular SLR, gives a series of hourly sea level projections for 2005-2100. Gradual sea level rise progressively worsens the impacts of high tides, surge and waves resulting from storms, and also freshwater floods from Sierra and coastal mountain catchments. The occurrence of extreme sea levels is pronounced when these factors coincide. The frequency and magnitude of extreme events, relative to current levels, follows a sharply escalating pattern as the magnitude of future sea level rise increases.
AB - California's coastal observations and global model projections indicate that California's open coast and estuaries will experience rising sea levels over the next century. During the last several decades, the upward historical trends, quantified from a small set of California tide gages, have been approximately 20 cm/century, quite similar to that estimated for global mean sea level. In the next several decades, warming produced by climate model simulations indicates that sea level rise (SLR) could substantially exceed the rate experienced during modern human development along the California coast and estuaries. A range of future SLR is estimated from a set of climate simulations governed by lower (B1), middle-upper (A2), and higher (A1fi) GHG emission scenarios. Projecting SLR from the ocean warming in GCMs, observational evidence of SLR, and separate calculations using a simple climate model yields a range of potential sea level increases, from 11 to 72 cm, by the 2070-2099 period. The combination of predicted astronomical tides with projected weather forcing, El Niño related variability, and secular SLR, gives a series of hourly sea level projections for 2005-2100. Gradual sea level rise progressively worsens the impacts of high tides, surge and waves resulting from storms, and also freshwater floods from Sierra and coastal mountain catchments. The occurrence of extreme sea levels is pronounced when these factors coincide. The frequency and magnitude of extreme events, relative to current levels, follows a sharply escalating pattern as the magnitude of future sea level rise increases.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=51749121400&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s10584-007-9376-7
DO - 10.1007/s10584-007-9376-7
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:51749121400
SN - 0165-0009
VL - 87
SP - S57-S73
JO - Climatic Change
JF - Climatic Change
IS - 1 SUPPL
ER -