Calculator Inputs
Example Data Table
| Scenario | Baseline → Target | Initial rate (mm/yr) | Acceleration (mm/yr²) | VLM (mm/yr) | Typical planning use |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Medium | 2026 → 2050 | 3.3 | 0.077 | 0.0 | General coastal asset screening |
| High | 2026 → 2100 | 4.5 | 0.10 | -2.0 | Subsiding deltas and critical infrastructure |
| Low | 2026 → 2050 | 2.5 | 0.03 | +1.0 | Uplifting coasts and conservative budgets |
Formula Used
This calculator models sea level change with an initial rate and a constant acceleration term. Component contributions (thermal expansion, melt, and land water storage) are summed into the initial rate, then optionally scaled by a scenario factor.
- Total initial rate: R0 = (Robs + Rtherm + Rglac + Rice + Rland) × F
- Absolute rise: S = R0·t + 0.5·a·t²
- End rate: R(t) = R0 + a·t
- Relative rise: Srel = S − VLM·t
Units: rates in mm/yr, acceleration in mm/yr², time t in years, and rise in mm (then converted).
How to Use This Calculator
- Set baseline and target years to match your planning horizon.
- Enter an observed base rate and (optionally) an acceleration term.
- Add component contributions if you want a transparent breakdown.
- For local impacts, provide vertical land motion (uplift/subsidence).
- Choose a scenario factor, then submit to view results and downloads.
Calculation History
Professional Notes and Data
1) What the calculator estimates
The calculator projects future sea level change using a starting rise rate and an optional acceleration term. It reports both absolute rise (ocean-driven change) and relative rise, which adjusts for vertical land motion. Relative rise is often the value that matters for streets, ports, and drainage systems.
2) Observed rise rates in recent decades
Satellite altimetry shows that global mean sea level rise has accelerated over time. A commonly cited multi-decadal average rate is about 3.3 mm per year, while the early-1990s rate was near 2.1 mm per year. By the mid‑2020s, some analyses place the annual rate near 4.5 mm per year, reflecting faster change than in the 1990s.
3) Total rise since the late 19th century
Long-term reconstructions indicate global mean sea level has risen on the order of 21–24 cm (8–9 inches) since 1880. This matters because it sets today’s coastal baseline and increases the reach of storm surges, tides, and wave runup. Even small additional increments can sharply raise flood frequency once thresholds are crossed.
4) Components: expansion and land ice
Sea level rises mainly from two physical sources: thermal expansion as seawater warms, and added mass from melting land ice. Many budgets also include land-water storage changes from groundwater depletion and reservoirs. The component inputs in this tool let you explore how different mechanisms add up to a total initial rate.
5) Why acceleration matters
Using acceleration captures the reality that the rate of rise is not constant. In a linear-only model, you multiply a single rate by time. With acceleration, the later years contribute more than the early years, which can noticeably increase projected rise over multi-decade horizons.
6) Local relative sea level and land motion
Coastal impacts depend on both ocean change and how the land surface moves. Subsidence in deltas and reclaimed coastal plains can add several millimeters per year to relative sea level rise. Conversely, uplift in some tectonic settings can partially offset ocean-driven rise.
7) Planning horizons and practical benchmarks
For many coastlines, multi-agency guidance highlights the importance of near-term planning. Some U.S.-focused scenario products indicate roughly 10–12 inches of rise over the next 30 years on average, though local values vary. The calculator helps you test how such benchmarks compare to your own selected rates and land-motion assumptions.
8) Using outputs responsibly
Treat results as a screening estimate, not a site design certification. Pair the numbers with local tide-gauge records, vertical land motion measurements, and scenario-based projections. If you need flood depths, add information on local topography, tides, storm surge, and drainage performance.
Data points above summarize widely used observational products and scenario guidance for planning-level interpretation.
FAQs
1) What is the difference between absolute and relative sea level rise?
Absolute rise describes ocean-driven change. Relative rise adjusts that value for land motion at a site, which can increase impacts during subsidence or reduce them during uplift.
2) Which inputs most strongly affect the result?
The starting total rate, acceleration, and the time horizon dominate. For local risk, vertical land motion can be equally important, especially in deltas and reclaimed coastal areas.
3) How should I choose an acceleration value?
Use published observational estimates or scenario products for your region. If uncertain, test several values to understand sensitivity, then report a range rather than a single number.
4) Are the component terms required?
No. They help you build a transparent total rate. If you already have a consolidated rate estimate, you can set component terms to zero and use only the observed base rate.
5) Can this tool replace local projection datasets?
It should not. Use it for quick screening and comparison. For engineering design, rely on authoritative local projections, tide-gauge statistics, and hazard allowances for storms and tides.
6) Why might my city’s rise differ from a global estimate?
Regional ocean dynamics, gravitational effects of ice loss, and local land motion create differences. Two locations can experience very different relative sea level rise even under the same global mean change.
7) What do the CSV and PDF downloads include?
The downloads capture your inputs and computed outputs, including horizon, scenario factor, absolute rise, relative rise, and end-of-period rate. They are useful for documentation, comparison, and sharing results with teams.