NASA researchers have also issued a warning for Mangalore in Karnataka and Mumbai,two cities are in grave danger from floods due to melting ice caps
LOS ANGELES:
NASA has developed a new forecasting tool that can predict which cities will be affected as different portions of ice sheets melt due to global warming.
The tool looks at the Earth's spin and gravitational effects to predict how water will be "redistributed" globally.
"This provides, for each city, a picture of which glaciers, ice sheets, and ice caps are of specific importance," researchers said.
"As cities and countries attempt to build plans to mitigate flooding, they have to be thinking about 100 years in the future and they want to assess risk in the same way that insurance companies do," said Erik Ivins, senior scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in the US.
Three key processes influenced "the sea-level fingerprint," the pattern of sea-level change around the world, according to the study published in the journal Science Advances.
These include gravity, "push-pull influence" of ice, and the rotation of the planet itself.
"We can compute the exact sensitivity – for a specific town – of a sea level to every ice mass in the world," said Eric Larour told 'BBC News'.
The tool provided a way for governments to work out which ice sheets they should be most worried about.
It suggests that in London sea-level rise could be significantly affected by changes in the north-western part of the Greenland ice sheet.
For New York, the area of concern is the ice sheet's entire northern and eastern portions, researchers said.
The NASA researchers have also issued a warning for Mangalore in Karnataka and Mumbai saying that the two cities are in grave danger from floods due to melting ice caps.
Over the next 100 years, the glacial melt may potentially rise Mangalore's sea levels by 15.98cm as and to 15.26cm in Mumbai and 10.65cm for New York, the research said.