By Andrew Freedman for Mashable
If humanity’s current business-as-usual path of global warming pollution continues, enough long-term sea level rise could be “locked in” by melting ice sheets — on the order of about 8.9 meters, or 29 feet, to submerge land that more than half a billion people call home, according to a new report.
If, on the other hand, warming were limited to 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit, or 2 degrees Celsius, compared to preindustrial levels, this would cut the population threatened by long-term global sea level rise in half, the report found.
Watch: How climate change affects the world’s most vulnerable people
The study, from the climate research and journalism group Climate Central, found that during the next few centuries, sea level rise could threaten the existence of entire cities, and in some cases, whole countries, depending on the decisions made in the next couple of years regarding cuts in greenhouse gas emissions.