I have yet to find out if the slide shows presented will be made available to the public,
(I attended as an observer with no right of audience),
but one of the slides had three lines, on a graph of sea level rise (y-axis), and year (x-axis),
showing (I think), best/worst scenarios/probabilities.
The Thames Estuary is a special case, as the exisiting (and future) Thames Barrier has to cope with tidal maxima combined with strong winds, funnelling seawater down the North Sea, then into the mouth of the tidal Thames.
I have yet to find out if the slide shows presented will be made available to the public,
(I attended as an observer with no right of audience),
but one of the slides had three lines, on a graph of sea level rise (y-axis), and year (x-axis),
showing (I think), best/worst scenarios/probabilities.
The Thames Estuary is a special case, as the exisiting (and future) Thames Barrier has to cope with tidal maxima combined with strong winds, funnelling seawater down the North Sea, then into the mouth of the tidal Thames.