Mekong River Delta (NASA)

Mekong River Delta in Vietnam (NASA)

Most of the world’s low-lying river deltas are sinking from human activity making them  increasingly vulnerable to severe flooding from rivers and ocean storms and putting tens of millions of people at risk living along them, according a new study led by the University of Colorado at Boulder.

Twenty-four out of the world’s 33 major deltas are sinking and 85 percent experienced severe flooding in recent years, according to the study.  This has resulted in the temporary submergence of roughly 100,000 square miles of land. About 500 million people in the world live on river deltas.

The sinking of deltas from Asia and India to the Americas is exacerbated by the upstream trapping of sediments by reservoirs and dams, man-made channels and levees that whisk sediment into the oceans beyond coastal floodplains and the accelerated compacting of floodplain sediment caused by the extraction of groundwater and natural gas.

Experts predict that global delta flooding could increase by 50 percent under current projections of about 18 inches in sea level rise by the end of the century. The flooding will increase even more if the capture of sediments upstream from deltas by reservoirs and other water diversion projects persists and prevents the growth and buffering of the deltas.

“We argue that the world’s low-lying deltas are increasingly vulnerable to flooding, either from their feeding rivers or from ocean storms,” said CU-Boulder Research Associate Albert Kettner, a co-author on the study at CU-Boulder’s Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research and member of the CSDMS team. “This study shows there are a host of human-induced factors that already cause deltas to sink much more rapidly than could be explained by sea level alone.”

The team used satellite data from NASA’s Shuttle Radar Topography Mission, which carried a bevy of radar instruments that swept more than 80 percent of Earth’s surface during a 12-day mission of the space shuttle Endeavour in 2000. The researchers compared the SRTM data with historical maps published between 1760 and 1922.

“Every year, about 10 million people are being affected by storm surges,” said CU-Boulder’s Irina Overeem, a co-author of the study. “Hurricane Katrina may be the best example that stands out in the United States, but flooding in the Asian deltas of Irrawaddy in Myanmar and the Ganges-Brahmaputra in India and Bangladesh have recently claimed thousands of lives as well.”

The researchers predict that similar disasters could potentially occur in the Pearl River delta in China and the Mekong River delta in Vietnam, where thousands of square miles are below sea level and the regions are hit by periodic typhoons.

“Although humans have largely mastered the everyday behavior of lowland rivers, they seem less able to deal with the fury of storm surges that can temporarily raise sea level by three to 10 meters (10 to 33 feet),” wrote the study authors. “It remains alarming how often deltas flood, whether from land or from sea, and the trend seems to be worsening.”

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For more information contact:

Albert Kettner, 303-735-5486, kettner@colorado.edu

Irina Overeem, 303-492-6631, Irina.overeem@colorado.edu

Irrawaddy