Sea Level Rise

Sea Level Rise RSS Feed

An increase in the average height of the sea surface over a vertical datum.

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Graph showing rise in global mean sea level over a globe with colors indicating sea level rise
Global mean sea level has risen 101 millimeters (3.98 inches) since 1992, and it currently is rising at approximately 3.9 mm (0.15 inches) per year. Credit: NASA Earth Observatory.

Tide gauge records of sea level date back more than 200 years, with some records extending back to 1807. Tide gauges, however, provide data only for the point at which they are installed. The acquisition of global sea level height data calibrated and processed for scientific research dates back only to the early 1990s and the launch of the first satellite ocean altimetry missions. Combining satellite altimetry data with tide gauge data (through a technique known as sea level reconstruction) results in a dataset with the record length of tide gauge data and the near-global coverage of satellite altimetry data. It also reveals an unmistakable trend: Global sea levels are rising, and the rate of this rise is increasing.

NASA's Earth Science Data Systems (ESDS) Program provides unrestricted access to data that can be used to monitor sea level change. Along with data that can be discovered and downloaded using NASA Earthdata Search, a principal NASA resource is the Physical Oceanography Distributed Active Archive Center (PO.DAAC). PO.DAAC manages and provides tools and services for NASA's oceanographic and hydrologic data (satellite, airborne, and in situ) to enable greater understanding of the physical processes and condition of the global ocean, including ocean surface topography. Information about the geodetic techniques used to derive sea surface height (such as Very Long Baseline Interferometry, VLBI; satellite laser ranging, SLR; or Doppler Orbitography and Radio-positioning Integrated by Satellite, DORIS) is available through NASA's Crustal Dynamics Data Information System (CDDIS).

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global map with red/yellow colors indicating rising sea surface blue colors indicating sea surface height falls
This image shows changes in global sea surface height between 1992 and 2019 based on satellite altimetry data from the TOPEX/Jason series of ocean altimetry missions. While the red and yellow colors indicate an overall rise in sea surface height, it's important to note blue areas indicating regions where sea surface height is falling. Click on image for larger view. Credit: NASA Ocean Surface Topography from Space.

Global mean sea level is the average height of the ocean surface. A warming global climate has contributed significantly to a rise in mean sea level through two primary processes: thermal expansion of water as it warms and the addition of freshwater to the ocean through the melting of terrestrial ice sheets and glaciers. Like all Earth processes, sea level rise is impacted by many other factors that can lead to localized variations in sea level change, including some areas in which sea level is falling. Along with thermal expansion and the addition of fresh water from melting glaciers and ice sheets, changes in land water storage that prevent water from entering the ocean (such as through agricultural use or the damming of water bodies) also impacts local sea levels.

Changing sea levels can affect human activities in coastal areas. Rising sea level inundates low-lying wetlands and dry land, erodes shorelines, contributes to coastal flooding, and increases the flow of salt water into estuaries and nearby groundwater aquifers. Higher sea level also makes coastal infrastructure more vulnerable to damage from storms.

Sea Level Change Data Pathfinder

The Sea Level Change Data Pathfinder guides data users through the process of selecting and using NASA Earth science datasets applicable to sea level change, with guidance on resolutions and direct links to the data sources. The Data Pathfinder also provides access to tools and applications for discovering, visualizing, and working with sea level change data, such as NASA Worldview, Giovanni, and State of the Ocean (SOTO).

Articles and Data User Profiles

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Three panel image of headshots of scientists using EOSDIS data for sea level research
Left to right: Dr. John Fasullo, Dr. Kristin Poinar, and Dr. Philip Thompson use NASA Earth science data in their work and research related to sea level change. Read more in their Data User Profiles. Credit: NASA EOSDIS.

Along with data available through Earthdata Search and NASA's DAACs, Earthdata articles provide background about sea level change, ocean altimetry missions, and how these data are being applied. Data User Profiles show how individual scientists and researchers are using data available through NASA's Earth Observing System Data and Information System (EOSDIS) to explore the science behind rising sea levels.

Relevant Earthdata Articles

The Precision Behind Sea Level Rise
Knowing the precise location of a satellite in space is critical for determining sea surface height and, through this, the rate of global mean sea level rise.

Solving the Data Puzzle of Sea Level Rise
A diversity of datasets is necessary to piece together the status and drivers of sea level rise.

Animation: Global Sea Level Change from ECCO V4r4 (1992-2017)
The animation compares global sea levels measured by NASA satellites and those reconstructed using NASA's latest global ocean reanalysis from the Estimating the Circulation and Climate of the Ocean (ECCO) project. 

Sea level projections from the IPCC 6th Assessment Report (AR6)
A new dataset available through PO.DAAC provides global and regional sea level projections from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) 6th Assessment Report (AR6).

Animation: Reshaping Earth - How the TOPEX and Jason Satellites Revolutionized Oceanography and Redefined Climate Science
Sea level-measuring satellites have revolutionized our understanding of the global ocean and provide one of the most important records of how fast our climate is changing. 

Sea Level to Rise up to a Foot by 2050, Interagency Report Finds
NASA, NOAA, USGS, and other U.S. government agencies project that the rise in ocean height in the next 30 years could equal the total rise seen over the past 100 years.

Rising Waters: How NASA is Monitoring Sea Level Rise
StoryMap showing the many ways NASA monitors, measures, and assesses changes in global sea level.

Webinars

NASA Earthdata Webinars span the Earth science disciplines and are designed to help users learn about NASA Earth science data, services, and tools and show users how to work with these resources.

Data Recipes and Tutorials

Data recipes are step-by-step instructions for using and working with Earth science data, information, tools, and services. Tutorials cover many different data products across the Earth science disciplines and different data discovery and data access tools, including programming languages and related software.

Additional Resources

NASA maintains two primary portals for information about sea level change and sea level rise:

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Words Rising Waters over a swing set sitting in a rising tide
Credit: NASA/Katie Jepson.

NASA's Applied Sciences Program and NASA's Earth Science News Team have created numerous resources related to sea level change. A good summary of NASA work is in the StoryMap Rising Waters: How NASA is Monitoring Sea Level Rise. Another good NASA Science Mission Directorate resource is Rising Seas, which is a collection of StoryMaps and videos related to the science behind sea level rise and NASA efforts to study this. In addition, an episode of NASA Science Live featured a NASA Earth Applied Sciences segment focused on the connections between how NASA studies ice and sea level rise as result of climate change and work supported by the Applied Sciences Disasters program area in the city of Norfolk, Virginia. Finally, NASA's Applied Remote Sensing Training Program (ARSET), which is part of Applied Sciences, has a learning module about using remotely sensed data to study sea level change: Assessing Sea Level Rise at the Regional to Local Scale Using Earth Observations.

Numerous sea level change animations are available through NASA's Scientific Visualization Studio (SVS) and a variety of relevant images and articles are available through NASA's Earth Observatory.

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