Storm surge Maryland, USA© Jason Box 4 facts about sea level rise November 6, 2024КлиматРабочая группа по реализации программы арктического мониторинга и оценки How melting ice in the Arctic will affect coastal communities globally and some cities already experience coastal inundation today Sea level rise can be one of the most severe consequences of climate change. In the past 10 years, the global sea level has been rising 1.5 times faster compared to the 1990s with a current mean sea level rise of 3.6 mm per year. This average increase might not sound like a lot, but it’s important to note that it doesn’t tell the whole story, as sea levels do not rise uniformly across the globe. While the Arctic land ice is the largest contributor to global sea level rise (AMAP, SWIPA, 2017), sea levels around Greenland are actually decreasing, whereas tropical nations like the Philippines or Indonesia are experiencing a disproportional increase. How can this be and what else is critical to understand about sea-level rise? To find answers, we spoke with Prof. Jason Box, a physical climatologist at the Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland and an Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme (AMAP) expert, who has co-led several AMAP climate reports. Here are four key insights from our conversation.