Exactly--I've been told the phrase is "worst plausible" outcome, and just as engineers are taught to design to be resilient to that (e.g., once in a hundred year flood), I understand business leaders are taught likewise (banks to be run to be resilient to a run on the bank; insurance and reinsurance to disasters; and the US defense department wants a military capable of fighting simultaneous conflicts in the Atlantic and Pacific basins; etc.). For such planning, the worst plausible outcome is not the central estimate, and yet that is what is being done in response to climate change--IPCC focusing on the central, most likely values whereas one entities should be responding to (per their traditional approaches) is the something like what are listed as unlikely and even very unlikely, but still plausible. For sea level rise, this is likely something like persistent rates of several meters per century even if climate stabilization is achieved. And basically no groups are preparing for this.
The most reported IPCC metric, namely the average over the last decade or two of the change in global average temperature, is just not the metric that needs to be used to drive adaptation, mitigation, and other climate change policies.
Mike MacCracken
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The General Assembly in its decision 78/558 of 1 August 2024 decided to hold a one-day high-level plenary meeting of the General Assembly, no later than the last day of the general debate of its eighty-first session, to further consider sea level rise.
The meeting aims to strengthen international cooperation and collective action to address sea level rise, including by supporting developing countries, particularly those most vulnerable to the adverse effects of climate change, as well as coastal communities, in building resilience and adapting to its consequences. The meeting will result, without setting a precedent for similar meetings, in a concise, action-oriented and intergovernmentally negotiated declaration agreed by consensus.
In order to support an open, inclusive and transparent process, a global online stakeholder consultation will gather inputs from stakeholders, including civil society organizations, academic institutions, the scientific community, the private sector, philanthropic organizations, Indigenous Peoples and local communities, and other relevant actors. Inputs received through this consultation will be compiled and shared with the co-facilitators to inform the intergovernmental consultations on the declaration.
Submit your inputs here
To view this discussion visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/planetary-restoration/01e985c8-03df-4a75-9de0-9ca0792f519c%40comcast.net.
URL of official website for more information
https://planetaryrestorationaction.group/
Question 1 – Knowledge, data and science to inform sea level rise risk assessments and decision‑making
The current global trend of 0.35C/decade would produce 2C global warming by 2040 and 4C by 2100. The Arctic is warming four times faster. Greenland contains enough ice for >7m SLR. The risk (probability x impact) from collapse of Greenland glaciers producing 0.5m SLR by 2050 leading to >2m by 2100 can be shown to be huge compared to the risk from cooling intervention to prevent such collapse.
Question 2 – Adaptation, finance and resilience in relation to sea level rise
Wealthy countries might prepare defences against a SLR of 0.5m by 2040. But the cost of such defence would be unaffordable for many countries, so low-lying areas, including some dense conurbations, would have to be evacuated. The mass migration caused would lead to huge tensions and aggravate conflict globally. Measures to cool the Arctic to prevent such SLR should be a UN top priority.
Question 3 - Livelihoods, socioeconomic challenges and culture and heritage in relation to sea level rise
Some megacities, much cultural heritage and 20% of global population live in low-lying areas; 0.5m SLR would be catastrophic for livelihoods, social cohesion, economies and cultural heritage. Every effort must be made to slow sea level rise, particularly where it is accelerating due to active tipping processes of polar meltdown, only stoppable by powerful cooling intervention.
Question 4 - Sea level rise and its legal dimensions
Countries have an obligation to protect their citizens. But the only available means to prevent catastrophic SLR is through Stratospheric Aerosol Injection (SAI), only implementable by a few of the wealthiest countries. International collaboration of these countries should be legally mandated for the rapid deployment of SAI to help protect everyone vulnerable to SLR, wherever they be.
Name of good practice
Deploy stratospheric aerosol injection to lower Arctic temperature and halt its accelerated meltdown
In your view, what are the top three drivers of its effectiveness?
1. Geophysics and paleoclimate research has established that cooling the Arctic and sub-Arctic surface water would slow the meltdown of Arctic glaciers; any delay to cooling deployment would increase the risk of irreversible ice mass loss leading inevitably to many metres of SLR.
2. Research suggests SAI can be ramped up to start lowering the Arctic temperature within years rather than decades; adverse side-effects seem manageable.
3. Arctic cooling offers major climate benefits: slowing the release of greenhouse gases from permafrost; reversing the trend towards ever more extreme weather; and avoiding a catastrophic AMOC collapse. These huge benefits could help persuade people of the extraordinary opportunity which rapid SAI deployment provides, besides slowing SLR.
Dear John,1. Absolutely, reply is vital,2. Points to make3. Whole host of reasons why we should be terrified of an accelerated rate of SLR.Examples are:a. Warm water penetration under polar ice sheets leading to break up of complete sheets,mass fluxes and enhanced glacier flow;b.Changed ocean circulation gives increased ocean to atmosphere heat flux;c.Increased flow rate of mountain glaciers.If the flow is enhanced for this or other reasons, we can expect:1.Worldwide floods;2.Loss of low level land especially rice crops;3.Ecolgical catastrophes.We have to preserve our ice!Sorry I can't do more. I can volunteer to look at what you write in the form, before sending it.Regards,PeterOn Tue, 14 Apr 2026 at 17:01, John Nissen <johnnis...@gmail.com> wrote:Dear Peter,I've not heard from you recently. I hope you are well.What do you think about a contribution in response to this call? Mike isn't able to help, but gives some advice to follow. We've only got today and tomorrow to get a submission in. But, having both been involved in giving evidence to the UK Environment Audit Committee, we should have some credibility.Best wishes, John---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Michael MacCracken <mmac...@comcast.net>
Date: Tue, Apr 14, 2026 at 12:43 AM
Subject: Re: [prag] Re: Consultation on SLR declaration, deadline 15th April
To: John Nissen <johnnis...@gmail.com>
Hi John--I'm off on vacation and just won't have the time to work on something in response to this call by the time of due date. My only suggestion based on your comment would be to be a bit more conservative on the amount. As I recall, the dashed line of the upward possibility in the AR6 came out at 2 or m by 2100. Work off of that and take half or so and spread out over the century just so your are not viewed as dismiss-able doomsayer. Half a meter by 2050 is not impossible but the key point then is that the rate will very likely accelerate and continue to grow. What aggressive SAI could do is likely first slow the acceleration and by 2100 perhaps get it to below today's rate--completely stopping calving will be unlikely, but making it so more snow falls on the ice sheets will be critical, and likely given there are warm ocean waters to evaporate moisture and precipitate out as snow and then cold surfaces to reduce summertime loss--that is how the Milankovich orbital mechanism worked to build up snow (warm winters and cools summers). So, try to stick to lessons and numbers from credible sources--you should be able to make a good case.
And sorry, but family vacation interactions have to have priority for family peace.
Best, Mike