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Multi-century global and regional sea-level rise commitments from cumulative greenhouse gas emissions in the coming decades

Authors

Nauels,  Alexander
External Organizations;

Nicholls,  Zebedee
External Organizations;

Möller,  Tessa
External Organizations;

Hermans,  Tim H. J.
External Organizations;

/persons/resource/matthias.mengel

Mengel,  Matthias       
Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research;

Kloenne,  Uta
External Organizations;

Smith,  Chris
External Organizations;

Slangen,  Aimée B. A.
External Organizations;

Palmer,  Matthew D.
External Organizations;

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Citation

Nauels, A., Nicholls, Z., Möller, T., Hermans, T. H. J., Mengel, M., Kloenne, U., Smith, C., Slangen, A. B. A., Palmer, M. D. (2025): Multi-century global and regional sea-level rise commitments from cumulative greenhouse gas emissions in the coming decades. - Nature Climate Change, 15, 1198-1204.
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41558-025-02452-5


Cite as: https://publications.pik-potsdam.de/pubman/item/item_33177
Abstract
Sea levels respond to climate change on timescales from decades to millennia. To isolate the sea-level contribution of historical and near-term GHG emissions, we use a dedicated scenario and modelling framework to quantify global and regional sea-level rise commitments of twenty-first century cumulative emissions. Under current climate policies, emissions until 2050 lock in 0.3 m (likely range 0.2–0.5 m) more global mean sea-level rise by 2300 than historical emissions until 2020. This additional commitment would grow to 0.8 m (0.5–1.4 m) for emissions until 2090, of which 0.6 m (0.4–1.1 m) could be avoided under very stringent mitigation. Resulting regional commitments would be around 10% higher than the global signal for the vulnerable Pacific region, mainly due to higher relative Antarctic contributions. Our work shows that multi-century sea-level rise commitments are strongly controlled by mitigation decisions in coming decades.