The study, published in the journal Earth’s Future, used high-resolution measurements of land elevation from NASA‘s ICESat-2 lidar satellite, launched in 2018, to improve upon models of sea level rise and inundation.
Previous assessments typically relied on radar-based data, which are less precise, the researchers said. “Radar is unable to fully penetrate vegetation and therefore overestimates surface elevation,” said Ronald Vernimmen, a researcher at the research firm Data for Sustainability in The Netherlands.
Many coastal areas are lower than scientists thought they were. The underestimates of land elevation mean coastal communities have less time to prepare for sea level rise than expected, with the biggest impacts of rising seas occurring earlier than previously thought.
The researchers found that after those first few metres of sea level rise, the rate at which land area falls below mean sea level decreases.
They started using these more accurate measurements of land elevation when he realised that existing land elevation estimates were not suitable for quantifying coastal flooding risk.
Using the new measurements of land elevation, Vernimmen and study co-author Aljosja Hooijer found coastal areas lie much lower than older radar data had suggested. Analyses of the new Lidar-based elevation model showed two metres of sea-level rise would cover up to 2.4 times the land area as observed by radar-based elevation models.
For example, the Lidar data suggest a two-metre increase in sea level could put most of Bangkok and its 10 million residents below sea level, while older data suggested that the city would still be largely above mean sea level under that same amount of sea level rise.
In total, after two metres of sea level rise, the researchers estimate that 240 million more people will live below mean sea level.
After three and four metres of sea level rise, that number increases by 140 million and by another 116 million, respectively, they said.
The researchers noted that cities below future sea level may not necessarily be submerged because levees, dikes and pumping stations can protect some areas from rising seas.
Amsterdam and New Orleans are modern examples of this, they said. However, such protection measures can be expensive and take decades to implement, according to the researchers.
If vulnerable communities want to mitigate the most damage, they need to act before the sea rises those first few meters, they added.