
WFP/Tania Moreno Residents of the flood-affected Icaco community in El Salvador collect energy cookies provided by the WFP.
The warning signs are increasingly hard to ignore. Sea-level rise is real, displacing thousands of people, destroying millions of acres of land and generating billions of dollars in losses. Due to competing predictions of future global temperatures, scientists are unsure exactly how fast or high sea levels will rise. But they all agree on its principle impacts: submergence and flooding of coastal land, saltwater intrusion into surface waters and groundwater, increased erosion and overwhelmingly negative social and economic repercussions. They are also emphatic that these effects will be widespread and will accelerate with time.
Rising temperatures, rising seas

Seeing solutions to sea-level rise

A Dutch model for coastal adaptation
A Chinese way to mitigating rising seas
Fight or flight in South East Asia and the South Pacific
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