Most islands and atolls in the Pacific Ocean, including Tuvalu, are growing,not shrinking.
As the sea gradually rises, the sea brings sand and sediment along with it, building up the height of islands along with it.
Despite many predictions that island nations in the Pacific would spawn waves of climate refugees, the population of Tuvalu and other islands have steadily grown, not decreased.
Short Summary:
Objective scientific evidence refutes claims that climate change is causing small islands to disappear under rising seas. Rising seas bring sand and sediment, which build up coastal shorelines along with rising waters. Also, coral, as living organisms growing near sea level, build up their height along with the rising sea, as seen in Figure 1.
Even more importantly, objective scientific evidence debunks claims that climate change is causing small islands to disappear. Rising seas bring sand and sediment, which build up coastal shorelines, often offsetting higher-than-usual sea levels.
An important example is the island of Tuvalu. Climate activists often claim the island nation of Tuvalu is sinking because of rising seas. However, a recent peer-reviewed study found eight of Tuvalu’s nine large coral atolls have grown in size during recent decades, and 75 percent of Tuvalu’s 101 smaller reef islands have increased as well.3
Further evidence can be found in Tuvalu’s population records. Many climate activists have warned that rising seas have started to cause or will soon cause waves of climate refugees seeking to flee islands like Tuvalu. However, Tuvalu’s population, like the population of many other island nations, has consistently grown in recent years, not declined. At the time of this publication, the population of Tuvalu had increased by 20 percent over the previous 30 years, and it had doubled compared to its population recorded in 1970.4
Additional peer-reviewed studies have confirmed other islands in the Pacific Ocean are keeping up with rising sea levels.5,6 Their atolls have gained more than enough height and mass to offset modest sea-level rise.7
Climate activist groups and some scientists have been making false dire warnings about sea-level rise for many decades. For instance, more than 30 years ago, the AFP international news agency reported all 1,196 islands that comprise the Maldives could be completely underwater over the next few decades.8 Not only are all 1,196 islands still above water, people from all over the world are flocking to the Maldives, not fleeing them. Like Tuvalu, the Maldives are benefiting from a lucrative tourist trade, not spawning climate refugees
Paul S. Kench, Murray R. Ford and Susan D. Owen, “Patterns of Island Change and Persistence Offer Alternate Adaptation Pathways for Atoll Nations,” Nature Communications, February 9, 2018, https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-018-02954-1
Climate At A Glance is a Project of The Heartland Institute View this page in our printable booklet (PDF) here. Email: think@heartland.org Photo: Onotoa Atoll, Gilbert Islands, Republic of Kiribati, Central Pacific. CC-SA WikiPedia
Most islands and atolls in the Pacific Ocean, including Tuvalu, are growing,not shrinking.
As the sea gradually rises, the sea brings sand and sediment along with it, building up the height of islands along with it.
Despite many predictions that island nations in the Pacific would spawn waves of climate refugees, the population of Tuvalu and other islands have steadily grown, not decreased.
Short Summary:
Objective scientific evidence refutes claims that climate change is causing small islands to disappear under rising seas. Rising seas bring sand and sediment, which build up coastal shorelines along with rising waters. Also, coral, as living organisms growing near sea level, build up their height along with the rising sea, as seen in Figure 1.
Even more importantly, objective scientific evidence debunks claims that climate change is causing small islands to disappear. Rising seas bring sand and sediment, which build up coastal shorelines, often offsetting higher-than-usual sea levels.
An important example is the island of Tuvalu. Climate activists often claim the island nation of Tuvalu is sinking because of rising seas. However, a recent peer-reviewed study found eight of Tuvalu’s nine large coral atolls have grown in size during recent decades, and 75 percent of Tuvalu’s 101 smaller reef islands have increased as well.3
Further evidence can be found in Tuvalu’s population records. Many climate activists have warned that rising seas have started to cause or will soon cause waves of climate refugees seeking to flee islands like Tuvalu. However, Tuvalu’s population, like the population of many other island nations, has consistently grown in recent years, not declined. At the time of this publication, the population of Tuvalu had increased by 20 percent over the previous 30 years, and it had doubled compared to its population recorded in 1970.4
Additional peer-reviewed studies have confirmed other islands in the Pacific Ocean are keeping up with rising sea levels.5,6 Their atolls have gained more than enough height and mass to offset modest sea-level rise.7
Climate activist groups and some scientists have been making false dire warnings about sea-level rise for many decades. For instance, more than 30 years ago, the AFP international news agency reported all 1,196 islands that comprise the Maldives could be completely underwater over the next few decades.8 Not only are all 1,196 islands still above water, people from all over the world are flocking to the Maldives, not fleeing them. Like Tuvalu, the Maldives are benefiting from a lucrative tourist trade, not spawning climate refugees
Paul S. Kench, Murray R. Ford and Susan D. Owen, “Patterns of Island Change and Persistence Offer Alternate Adaptation Pathways for Atoll Nations,” Nature Communications, February 9, 2018, https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-018-02954-1
Climate At A Glance is a Project of The Heartland Institute View this page in our printable booklet (PDF) here. Email: think@heartland.org Photo: Onotoa Atoll, Gilbert Islands, Republic of Kiribati, Central Pacific. CC-SA WikiPedia
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