Reconstruction of hourly coastal water levels and counterfactuals without sea level rise for impact attribution

Simon Treu, Sanne Muis, Sönke Dangendorf, Thomas Wahl, Julius Oelsmann, Stefanie Heinicke, Katja Frieler, Matthias Mengel

Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Rising seas are a threat to human and natural systems along coastlines. The relation between global warming and sea level rise is established, but the quantification of impacts of historical sea level rise on a global scale is largely absent. To foster such quantification, here we present a reconstruction of historical hourly (1979–2015) and monthly (1900–2015) coastal water levels and a corresponding counterfactual without long-term trends in sea level. The dataset pair allows for impact attribution studies that quantify the contribution of sea level rise to observed changes in coastal systems following the definition of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Impacts are ultimately caused by water levels that are relative to the local land height, which makes the inclusion of vertical land motion a necessary step. Also, many impacts are driven by sub-daily extreme water levels. To capture these aspects, the factual data combine reconstructed geocentric sea level on a monthly timescale since 1900, vertical land motion since 1900 and hourly storm-tide variations since 1979. The inclusion of observation-based vertical land motion brings the trends of the combined dataset closer to tide gauge records in most cases, but outliers remain. Daily maximum water levels get in closer agreement with tide gauges through the inclusion of intra-annual ocean density variations. The counterfactual data are derived from the factual data through subtraction of the quadratic trend. The dataset is made available openly through the Inter-Sectoral Impact Model Intercomparison Project (ISIMIP) at https://doi.org/10.48364/ISIMIP.749905 (Treu et al., 2023a).
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1121-1136
Number of pages16
JournalEarth System Science Data
Volume16
Issue number2
Early online date27 Feb 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

Funding

Thomas Wahl has been supported by NASA’s Sea Level Change Team (award number 80NSSC20K1241) and the National Science Foundation (award numbers 1854896 and 2141461). Sönke Dangendorf has been supported by NASA’s Sea Level Change Team (award number 80NSSC20K1241) and David and Jane Flowerree. The publication of this article was funded by the Open Access Fund of the Leibniz Association. This research has been supported by the Bundesministerium für Bildung, Wissenschaft, Forschung und Technologie (grant nos. 01LP1907A and 16QK05), the European Commission, Horizon 2020 (grant no. 820712), and the European Cooperation in Science and Technology (grant no. CA19139). This research has been supported by the Bundesministerium für Bildung, Wissenschaft, Forschung und Technologie (grant nos. 01LP1907A and 16QK05), the European Commission, Horizon 2020 (grant no. 820712), and the European Cooperation in Science and Technology (grant no. CA19139). Thomas Wahl has been supported by NASA's Sea Level Change Team (award number 80NSSC20K1241) and the National Science Foundation (award numbers 1854896 and 2141461). Sönke Dangendorf has been supported by NASA's Sea Level Change Team (award number 80NSSC20K1241) and David and Jane Flowerree.

FundersFunder number
NASA's Sea Level Change Team
Leibniz-Gemeinschaft
European Commission, Horizon 2020
Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung01LP1907A, 16QK05
European Cooperation in Science and TechnologyCA19139
NASA’s Sea Level Change Team80NSSC20K1241
Horizon 2020 Framework Programme820712
National Science Foundation2141461, 1854896

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