Santa Cruz, California Sea Level Drops To Its Lowest Level In The Satellite Era

Last year, Heidi’s geniuses predicted that California sea level would rise at least six inches by 2030.

April 20, 2012

In the 20th century, the sea level rose on average 8 inches along California’s coastline, research by Climate Central and others shows.

Middle-of-the-road expectations are that it will rise 6 to 8 more inches by 2030, 12 inches by 2050 and 24 inches by 2070.

By 2100, it could be 3 to 5 feet higher, said Gary Griggs, director of the Institute of Marine Sciences at UC Santa Cruz.

As Earth Day nears, Calif. worries about rising sea levels | The Republic

Since these expert forecasts were made, University of Colorado satellite data shows sea level at Santa Cruz dropping to its lowest level on record.

ScreenHunter_181 Aug. 03 17.50

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4 Responses to Santa Cruz, California Sea Level Drops To Its Lowest Level In The Satellite Era

  1. gator69 says:

    Heidi’s ho’s?

  2. crosspatch says:

    What’s the source of these data? I would expect Santa Cruz sea level data to go back father than 1992.

  3. Olaf Koenders says:

    “But wait..!” they’ll say. “It’s not 2030 yet.”

    “It doesn’t matter.” we say “Because you’ll keep moving the goal posts.”

  4. Climatism says:

    Reblogged this on CACA and commented:
    Heidi Cullen and her ‘Climate Central’ eco-alarmist band, fail data school 101.

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