Cut Soot to Stave Off Sea Level Rise

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This is Scientific American 60-Second Earth. I'm David Biello. Your minute begins now.
Soot. The dirty, dark particles clog lungs, causing asthma and other chronic breathing problems.
Turns out cleaning up such soot, along with certain other types of air pollution, could help slow sea level rise too.
That's according to new research published in Nature Climate Change.
Researchers looked at soot and various greenhouse gases that don't last very long in the atmosphere, methane, ozone in the lower altitudes and the factory-made refrigerants known as HFCs.
Previous studies have shown that cutting these types of air pollution could slow climate change, buying time to bring carbon dioxide emissions under control.
The new research shows that such cuts would also significantly slow the rate of sea level rise by more than 20 percent per year,
which could keep the rise under a meter by the end of the century.
Cutting these so-called short lived climate forcers by 30 to 60 percent would prevent roughly a degree Celsius of additional warming, meaning less thermal expansion of ocean waters and less meltdown of ice sheets.
Cleansing the air of soot saves lives directly.
But it also might help reduce the price demanded by the waves lapping ever higher at the shore.
Your minute is up, for Scientific American 60-Second Earth. I'm David Biello.

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