▲ | martinpw 3 days ago | |
Figure 1 in the above paper packs a lot of interesting information: https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/cms/asset/d7c477fa-3... One important factor shown there is that dams hold back water on land, so act to decrease sea levels. It is not as big an effect as groundwater depletion, but is significant (around half as much). The net effect of these two is much less than the other factors causing sea level rise (melting land ice) - looks like around 10% of total sea level rise comes from groundwater depletion+dams combined. | ||
▲ | metalman 3 days ago | parent [-] | |
here's the problem with dams filling up and offseting ocean rise, amost all of the potential large dams, have been built and are full now, and that offset has masked some ocean rise, which is now accelerating, but all of the "planning" ,climate mitigation policy, treatys, etcerlalala, has been working with the wrong numbers. the wild card is changes in salinity and temperature shutting down the main thermo transfer currents at each pole, setting off deap ocean warming and expansion. not good. |