4.8 Article

Climate change risk to global port operations

期刊

NATURE CLIMATE CHANGE
卷 11, 期 1, 页码 14-+

出版社

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41558-020-00937-z

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资金

  1. Spanish Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad (MINECO) under the RISKOADAPT project [BIA2017-89401-R]
  2. IFC
  3. NCAR - National Science Foundation [1852977]

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The ports sector is critical to global transport and trade, and climate change may impact port operations, resulting in economic losses. Rising sea levels and heat stress are the main contributors to increased risk in ports.
The ports sector is critical to global transport and trade. Climate change may compromise port operations, resulting in an increase in operational shutdowns and subsequent economic losses. Here, we present an analysis of historical global risk across the operations of 2,013 ports worldwide and the impacts under a high-end warming scenario, considering atmospheric and marine hazards, industry established operational thresholds, exposure and vulnerability. Increased coastal flooding and overtopping due to sea level rise, as well as the heat stress impacts of higher temperatures, are the main contributors to amplified risk. Ports located in the Pacific Islands, Caribbean Sea and Indian Ocean appear to be at extremely high risk by 2100, whereas those in the African Mediterranean and the Arabian Peninsula (Persian Gulf and Red Sea) are expected to experience very high risk. Estimating risks at the global scale cannot capture site-level details, but these results provide a benchmark for further research and decision-making. Global trade and transport depend on the resilience of the ports sector. Multi-hazard operational risks are estimated for 2,013 ports under historical climate and future warming; of the marine and atmospheric hazards considered, coastal flooding, wave overtopping and heat stress increase risk most.

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