Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 December 2009
Keywords
Sea-level rise; extreme events; population density; scenarios
Abstarct
The chapter discusses some issues related to the potential impacts of sea-level rise (SLR) on coastal populations and agriculture. This is a study mostly based on global data at the countrywide (national) scale. Indirect effects of SLR, as well as the potential impact of extreme events, may be more significant than direct effects in the future. In the absence of an accepted methodology for building long-term scenarios, two approaches are explored: an analysis of a large database of extreme events that have occurred over the last 100 years, and an analysis of population statistics in relation to a national vulnerability index based on physiographic features and population density. Recent historical data are examined with a view to identifying trends that could be extrapolated into the twenty-first century. Despite the limitations of the data sets, some trends do emerge, but they do not necessarily point in the direction of greater property and population losses in the future owing to sea-caused disasters. Rather, they seem to indicate that difficulties – independent of the global changes – will be relatively larger on land than along the coasts, and that the major component of life and property losses is associated with levels of economic development. The ‘national vulnerability index’ confirms that vulnerability – if considered at the scale of the globe – varies considerably, over several orders of magnitude. In addition, the index exhibits a marked positive skew.
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