He said most home insurance policies excluded so-called “actions of the sea”,and didn’t cover erosion or flooding from storm tides or wave activity.
“If you knew that your home contents insurance would not cover actions of the sea,you know the risk burden is then on you for basically rolling the dice at a one-in-four chance of getting impacted by coastal floods or erosion,” Mortlock said.
In the paper Mortlock wrote with Dr Felicity McCormack,a senior research fellow for Securing Antarctica’s Environmental Future at Monash University,the pair says atmospheric and ocean warming are accelerating glacier and ice sheet melting.
“I mean,you wouldn’t go on a plane if there was a one-in-four chance of it falling from the sky,right?”
Dr Tom Mortlake
“Glaciers and ice sheets combined are likely to overtake every other driver of sea level rise over the coming decades and become the majority contributors to the 0.44 metres (medium emissions scenarios) to 0.77 metres (high emissions scenarios) of likely sea level rise by 2100.”
In the Australian context,this means increased storm surges,which will increasingly damage coastal infrastructure and properties.
“While there’s a lot of uncertainty,we know that the more carbon dioxide we pump into the atmosphere,the faster we will melt the ice sheets,and the more rapid and the higher magnitude the sea level rise,” McCormack said.