22/08/2019

Climate Change May Change The Way Ocean Waves Impact 50% Of The World’s Coastlines

The Conversation* -  |  |  | 

Waves in Australia’s southern coasts are likely to get bigger and faster under a warming climate. AAP Image/City of Gold Coast
The rise in sea levels is not the only way climate change will affect the coasts. Our research, published today in Nature Climate Change, found a warming planet will also alter ocean waves along more than 50% of the world’s coastlines.
If the climate warms by more than 2℃ beyond pre-industrial levels, southern Australia is likely to see longer, more southerly waves that could alter the stability of the coastline.
Scientists look at the way waves have shaped our coasts – forming beaches, spits, lagoons and sea caves – to work out how the coast looked in the past. This is our guide to understanding past sea levels.
But often this research assumes that while sea levels might change, wave conditions have stayed the same. This same assumption is used when considering how climate change will influence future coastlines – future sea-level rise is considered, but the effect of future change on waves, which shape the coastline, is overlooked.

Changing waves
Waves are generated by surface winds. Our changing climate will drive changes in wind patterns around the globe (and in turn alter rain patterns, for example by changing El Niño and La Niña patterns). Similarly, these changes in winds will alter global ocean wave conditions.
Further to these “weather-driven” changes in waves, sea level rise can change how waves travel from deep to shallow water, as can other changes in coastal depths, such as affected reef systems.
Recent research analysed 33 years of wind and wave records from satellite measurements, and found average wind speeds have risen by 1.5 metres per second, and wave heights are up by 30cm – an 8% and 5% increase, respectively, over this relatively short historical record.
These changes were most pronounced in the Southern Ocean, which is important as waves generated in the Southern Ocean travel into all ocean basins as long swells, as far north as the latitude of San Francisco.

Sea level rise is only half the story
Given these historical changes in ocean wave conditions, we were interested in how projected future changes in atmospheric circulation, in a warmer climate, would alter wave conditions around the world.
As part of the Coordinated Ocean Wave Climate Project, ten research organisations combined to look at a range of different global wave models in a variety of future climate scenarios, to determine how waves might change in the future.
While we identified some differences between different studies, we found if the 2℃ Paris agreement target is kept, changes in wave patterns are likely to stay inside natural climate variability.
However in a business-as-usual climate, where warming continues in line with current trends, the models agreed we’re likely to see significant changes in wave conditions along 50% of the world’s coasts. These changes varied by region.
Less than 5% of the global coastline is at risk of seeing increasing wave heights. These include the southern coasts of Australia, and segments of the Pacific coast of South and Central America.
On the other hand decreases in wave heights, forecast for about 15% of the world’s coasts, can also alter coastal systems.
But describing waves by height only is the equivalent of describing an orchestra simply by the volume at which it plays.
Some areas will see the height of waves remain the same, but their length or frequency change. This can result in more force exerted on the coast (or coastal infrastructure), perhaps seeing waves run further up a beach and increasing wave-driven flooding.
Similarly, waves travelling from a slightly altered direction (suggested to occur over 20% of global coasts) can change how much sand they shunt along the coast – important considerations for how the coast might respond. Infrastructure built on the coast, or offshore, is sensitive to these many characteristics of waves.
While each of these wave characteristics is important on its own, our research identified that about 40% of the world’s coastlines are likely to see changes in wave height, period and direction happening simultaneously.
While some readers may see intense waves offering some benefit to their next surf holiday, there are much greater implications for our coastal and offshore environments. Flooding from rising sea levels could cost US$14 trillion worldwide annually by 2100 if we miss the target of 2℃ warming.
How coastlines respond to future climate change will be a response to a complex interplay of many processes, many of which respond to variable and changing climate. To focus on sea level rise alone, and overlooking the role waves play in shaping our coasts, is a simplification which has great potential to be costly.

*The authors would like to acknowledge the contribution of Xiaolan Wang, Senior Research Scientist at Environment and Climate Change, Canada, to this article.

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Climate Policy Vacuum Boosting Investor Focus On Low-Carbon Assets

RenewEconomy - 



Key points
  • 90% of the investors surveyed are implementing low carbon strategies.
  • 50-80% of investors surveyed are undertaking or are actively considering low carbon investment across most asset classes
  • More than 70% of investors have or are considering climate-aligned targets for their portfolios. Many are also doing the same across a range of asset classes.
  • When faced with policy uncertainty, more than 40% of investors redirect investments to jurisdictions, sectors or markets with less uncertainty, and nearly 60% increase company engagement to manage climate-risks across their portfolios.
  • Over 80% of investors are actively considering reporting under the Taskforce on Climate-related Financial Disclosures.
Lumps of coal in federal parliament and dodgy emissions accounting have done little to dampen investor appetite for low-carbon opportunities in Australia, a new report from Investor Group on Climate Change has found.
Instead, Australia’s perpetual federal climate policy vacuum appears to be having the perverse effect of focusing investor interest in what companies, themselves, are doing to shield their business and their shareholders from climate risk.
The report, based on a survey of institutional Australia and New Zealand investors managing more than $1.3 trillion in assets, found between 50-80 per cent were undertaking or actively considering low carbon investment across most asset classes.
More than 70 per cent of investors said that had or were considering climate-aligned targets for their portfolios, while 90 per cent said they were implementing low carbon strategies.
“Despite recent political upheavals, investors in Australia and New Zealand are focused on finding low carbon opportunities and getting deals done”, said IGCC CEO Emma Herd in a statement accompanying the report on Tuesday.
“Climate-aligned investment is continuing to accelerate. Investors are actively looking for opportunities to support climate solutions and embed climate change into whole of portfolio management.”
But the federal government’s ongoing failure to take climate action seriously, or to look beyond the energy status quo, is having an investment impact – of sorts.
According to the survey, when faced with policy uncertainty, more than 40 per cent of investors chose to redirect investments to jurisdictions, sectors or markets with less uncertainty.
And nearly 60 per cent of those surveyed said that would increase company engagement to manage climate-risks across their portfolios.
Another 80-plus per cent said they were actively considering reporting under the Taskforce on Climate-related Financial Disclosures.
It’s an outcome that’s analogous to Australia’s rooftop solar boom, where consumers have responded to consistently escalating power prices by taking matters into their own hands.
How institutional investors are thinking about climate change investment opportunities and challenges
In Australia, this “pro-sumer” driven shift has been so widespread and so fast, it has forced governments and the incumbent industry to face up to the changing grid.
“When faced with increased policy or regulatory uncertainty in key markets, investors go offshore to find climate investment opportunities, and they ratchet up active engagement with companies they own,” Herd notes in the IGCC report.
“Recent company engagement by investors with companies, such as Glencore, Rio Tinto, BHP Billiton, Shell and BP, are beginning to build the resilience to companies and the investors who own them have to growing climate-related risks.
“In the absence of clear policies to achieve net zero emissions in line with the Paris Agreement investors are likely to increase company engagement to reduce their exposure to an uncoordinated and ad hoc policy response,” Herd says.
And the industry agrees.
“The (IGCC’s) Accelerating Change report documents, on an industry-wide scale, what we’re hearing from our own investors, and seeing in our communities,” said  the head of renewable infrastructure at  Impact Investment Group, Lane Crockett.
“There is a demand for investments that integrate a response to climate science, contribute to climate action and find the opportunities for financial returns in the transition to a zero-carbon economy.”
“We’re proud to be one of the fund managers offering investments, like the IIG Solar Asset Fund, that meet all those goals, and we’re deeply grateful to the IGCC for helping the investment community to understand the risks and opportunities,” Crockett said.

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Esperance Logs First Verified Sea Snake Sighting, But Expert Says Warming Oceans May Bring More

ABC NewsEmily JB Smith

Christopher Dornan saw the yellow-bellied sea snake at Alexander Bay. (Supplied: Christopher Dornan)
Key points
  • A tropical sea snake has been spotted at the bottom of WA near the town of Esperance
  • One expert suggests warming ocean temperatures may cause sea snake distributions to expand globally
  • The yellow-bellied sea snake has also been found in the chilly waters of Tasmania and in the Atlantic Ocean
Tropical sea creatures are a rarity at Christopher Dornan's local beach, given it is more than 1,500 kilometres from anywhere remotely tropical.
Yet an expert has confirmed the reptile spotted by the Esperance teacher on the chilly shores of Alexander Bay was indeed a yellow-bellied sea snake — marking the first verified record of a living sea snake in the area.
While reptile enthusiast Brian Bush — a man with no formal qualifications, but whose passion for reptiles has seen several snakes named in his honour — said he saw three sea snakes washed ashore during the decade he spent in the region, all of them were dead.
But sea snake research scientist, Blanche D'Anastasi of James Cook University, said it could be a sign of things to come, as warming ocean temperatures advance sea snake distributions globally.
Map: The sea snake was at Alexander Bay, about 100 kilometres east of Esperance ©Mapbox 
Mr Dornan ventured to Alexander Bay, about 100km east of Esperance on Western Australia's southern coast, earlier this month with his wife and a friend, who quickly spotted the sea snake.
While they initially thought it was a moray eel, he said the tail looked decidedly like a sea snake.
"We didn't know whether it was cold and had come out of the water to get warm or was stuck up on the high tide mark," Mr Dornan said.
"We poked it a little bit to see if it was okay, and it sort of slithered a bit, but it didn't seem able to move towards the ocean."
While he said they debated over moving it back into the sea, they were wary of its famously venomous bite.
The sea snake was spotted at Alexander Bay, about 100km east of Esperance. (Supplied: Christopher Dornan)
Last year an English traveller working on a trawler boat in the Gulf of Carpentaria was killed after being bitten by a sea snake.
Mr Dornan said he was also surprised to see the creature near such temperate waters, with oceans in the region dropping as low as 13 degrees Celsius at this time of year.
"I'd never heard of a sea snake being down here before. It's very odd," he said.
"Both my wife and my friend, we've lived up north and they grew up there in the Pilbara and the Kimberley.
"They were used to seeing sea snakes in the water and a couple of times on the beach and they always looked pretty feisty.
"But this one looked a little bit more sedate; it didn't look quite as happy."

Surfing its way down the WA coastline
Ms D'Anastasi said she had never heard of a sea snake sighting near Esperance before, even though WA was a global hotspot for sea snake diversity, with nine endemic species.
She said the most similar incident on record was of an olive sea snake sighting 580km away at Albany in 2013.

The weird, wonderful, worrying
world of sea snakes
"I don't have any records of sea snakes in Esperance," she said.
"For a little sea snake to make it all the way down the south coast and then trek along the line to Esperance is really interesting."
Mr Bush said he had never encountered a sea snake that made it to the area alive.
"I was on the Esperance sand plains for 10 years and probably in that time three [dead ones] turned up," he said.
Ms D'Anastasi believes the creature had surfed the Leeuwin current down the coast of WA, but was most likely in poor condition when it washed ashore.
"Occasionally if they're unwell they'll strand themselves because they're afraid of drowning," she said.
"It's possible that this little snake floated down in a current and then has been unwell and has stranded in Esperance."
Ms D'Anastasi said once ashore, sea snakes were at greatest risk of predation from birds and dehydration.
She recommended that anyone who came across a stranded sea snake should place a bowl of fresh water nearby to ward off the latter.
But given the animals are highly venomous, she urged the public to be cautious and call a wildlife carer as soon as possible.

Sea snake sighting in Tasmania
Ms D'Anastasi's tips could be worth jotting down as warming oceans are set to expand the distribution of the world's 70 species of sea snakes.
She said the yellow-bellied sea snake had the largest distribution of any sea snake and was notorious for surfing the world's oceanic currents, with one even found alive in Tasmania.
During the recent El Nino weather conditions Ms D'Anastasi said sea snakes were spotted in the Atlantic Ocean for the first time in 20–30 years.
She urged anyone who found a sea snake in Australia to record it on the Australian Sea Snakes Facebook page, where the information would be submitted to national records databases and become publicly available.
"As the climate warms we will see sea snakes spread further south," Ms D'Anastasi said.
"There is some early evidence that sea snakes are occurring in cold, temperate waters with increasing frequency."
Although that could see the deadly creature in Esperance waters more often, Mr Dornan said it would be unlikely to deter the locals.
"A few of the guys at school surf, and they were just laughing saying it's another reason to stay out of the water," he said.
"But none of them seem to — they're all back in there!"

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