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Schofield, Clive; Arsana, Andi --- "Climate change and the limits of maritime jurisdiction" [2012] ELECD 1094; in Warner, Robin; Schofield, Clive (eds), "Climate Change and the Oceans" (Edward Elgar Publishing, 2012) 127

Book Title: Climate Change and the Oceans

Editor(s): Warner, Robin; Schofield, Clive

Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing

ISBN (hard cover): 9781848448186

Section: Chapter 6

Section Title: Climate change and the limits of maritime jurisdiction

Author(s): Schofield, Clive; Arsana, Andi

Number of pages: 26

Abstract/Description:

Among the most salient impacts on the oceans associated with climate change is potentially significant and, critically, rapid sea-level rise. Sealevel rise of this character would clearly pose potentially disastrous threats to numerous coastal States, especially those with large areas of heavily-populated, low-lying coastal territory. In light of long-standing and ongoing shifts in the concentration of global populations from rural to urban and from interior/highland to coastal/lowland contexts, concerns over the potential effects of sea-level rise on heavily inhabited areas are significant (Schofield 2011). Indeed, it has been estimated that a sea-level rise of 1 m would inundate the territory presently home to around 60 million people (Ananthaswamy 2009). Further, even if not permanently inundated, climate change and sea-level rise are likely to make low-lying coastal areas more vulnerable to periodic flooding as a consequence of an increasing incidence of extreme weather events, leading, for instance, to storm surges occurring on top of an elevated base sea level (Gornitz 1995). Of particular concern in this context are large portions of the low-lying mega-deltas of the world, including those of Vietnam’s Mekong and Red Rivers in the Asia-Pacific. These areas are especially vulnerable because large areas are actually below mean sea level at present sea levels (Doyle et al. 2010). Indeed, it has been estimated that a 1 m rise in sea level could displace more than 7 million inhabitants in the Mekong delta area alone (UNDP 2011). Moreover, in addition to threats to populated coastal areas, concerns have been raised over the potential impacts of increased salt water intrusion on agricultural land close to the coast as well as valuable coastal environments and habitats such as wetlands and mangroves as a consequence of sea-level rise (Freestone 1991). Rising sea levels and the inundation of coastal territory also pose a dire and possibly terminal threat for communities inhabiting low-lying islands and States composed of islands.


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