Large cities in China and India are most exposed to the danger of rising sea levels in the coming decades, threatening both urban populations and the valuation of buildings and infrastructure. Sea levels are widely expected to rise as a result of global warming, with the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change saying that the seas are already rising by 3.6mm a year and that the acceleration of this rate will result in water levels rising by between 30cm and 110cm from current levels by 2100, depending on the path of global greenhouse gas emissions. . follow ➡️ @eco_modern_city . Three Chinese cities, Guangzhou, Dongguan and Yancheng, top the list in terms of the surface area that would be at “extreme risk” — under at least 67cm of water by 2100 — with 704 sq km of Guangzhou’s urban area in this category, alongside 201 sq km in Dongguan and 180 sq km in Yancheng. . @financialtimes . #Climate #GlobalWarming #ClimateChange #SeaLevels #greenhousegas #global #map #data #China #India #canada🇨🇦 #environment #earth #nature #climateaction #england🇬🇧 #usa🇺🇸 #persia #uae🇦🇪 #qatar🇶🇦 #bali #philippines🇵🇭 #iran🇮🇷 #japan🇯🇵 (at Toronto, Ontario) https://www.instagram.com/p/B9sv1dtHwh3/?igshid=1nyenxwqvb1ga

















