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	ACIDIFICATION
 Oceans are acidifying 10  times faster now than 55 million years ago when a mass extinction of marine  species occurred. (University   of Bristol researchers,  in Nature Geoscience, 2010)  If emissions aren’t stopped,  a mass marine extinction is possible by the end of the century with degraded  coastal waters and outbreaks of toxic algae and jellyfish. (Geological Society of London, 2010)
 DEAD ZONES
 Oxygen-depleted  dead zones caused by global warming can remain for thousands of years. (Shaffer et al. in Nature Geoscience,  2009) Climate  change, as well as agricultural run-off, is causing new and larger low-oxygen  dead zones. Now well over 400 in number and usually along coasts, dead zones  have been doubling every decade since the 1960s. (Science, 2008)
Toxic algae  growth could become a tipping point. In the  Baltic Sea, record high temperatures in summer 2010 led to an immense patch of  algae the size of Germany,  and spreading.  Toxic algae infestations are occurring with  ever greater frequency in both inland and ocean waters worldwide. 
 CORAL BLEACHING 
 In  Southeast Asia and the Indian Ocean, experts  are reporting coral bleaching in 2010 as the worst since 1998, when a similar  event caused 16% of the world’s coral reefs to perish. (Australian  Research Council (ARC) Centre of  Excellence for Coral Reef Studies) 
 OCEAN CIRCULATION
 Over  the next century, the Atlantic Ocean  circulation might slow to a stop or reverse due to large amounts of melted freshwater  changing the ocean’s salt concentration. Such an event could trigger an Ice Age  in Europe and North America.  (Woods Hole Oceanographic  Institution, 2003) 
 OCEAN WARMING
 An estimated 90% of the heat from  greenhouse gases over the past 50 years has been absorbed by the oceans, all  the way to the deep ocean floor. If the heat currently being  poured into the deep ocean were to stay in the atmosphere instead, our ambient  temperature would rise at a rate of 3 degrees Celsius per decade. The Antarctic Ocean has the strongest deep warming, and is adding  to sea level rise as well, both through expansion and the melt of land ice into  the ocean. (Sarah Purkey, an oceanographer at the University of Washington,  USA)
Frozen methane  from beneath the ocean floor could be released in massive amounts if the oceans  are warmed enough, thus leading to further catastrophic warming. Sudden  explosive releases of methane could also trigger 15-meter tsunamis. At the  current rate, sea temperatures could increase by as much as 5.8 degrees Celsius  by 2100. (The Royal Geographical  Society. Dr. Mark Maslin, Senior Reader in  Geography at University College London and a senior researcher for the London  Environmental Change Research Centre, 2005) The ocean  temperature is rising 50% faster than previous 2007 estimates. 
 PHYTOPLANKTON LOSS
 Warming oceans caused a 40% decline in phytoplankton  populations since 1950, which will have serious consequences. Phytoplankton not  only provides crucial support to the marine ecosystem, it produces half the  world’s oxygen, and eliminates CO2. (Boyce et al. Nature, Jul 2010)
 SEA LEVEL RISE 
   
 Dr. John Holdren, president of American  Association for the Advancement of Science, predicts a possible 4-meter sea  level rise by end of the century, and Dr. James Hansen, NASA’s head of Goddard  Institute for Space Studies, has stated the likelihood of a 5-meter sea level  rise by end of the century. (2006, 2007, respectively.)A sea level rise of even 1 meter would result  in over 100 million climate refugees and endanger major cities like London, Cairo, Bangkok, Venice, New York, and Shanghai.Examples of countries affected by sea level rise:Âu Lạc (Vietnam).  At the nation’s rice bowl region, the Mekong  Delta, ocean salt water has encroached an unprecedented 60 kilometers up-river  in 2010, threatening 100,000 hectares of rice.Thailand. Seawater is expected to reach Bangkok’s ground level in  25 years. (GEodetic  Earth Observation Technologies for Thailand: Environmental Change  Detection and Investigation, 2010)  Egypt. More than 58 meters of coastline  have vanished every year since 1989 in Rasheed. (Omran Frihy of the Coastal Research  Institute, 2010)  
Sea level rise  caused at least 18 island nations to completely disappear while many more  coastal areas are continually threatened. More than 40 other island nations are  at risk from rising sea levels. Sea level rise  threatens half of the world's population living within 200 kilometers of a  coastline. Already, low-lying coastal regions and deltas see effects: 17  million in Bangladesh  have fled their homes, mainly  because of coastal erosion. Groundwater sources are contaminated by saltwater  in Israel and Thailand, small island states in the Pacific and  Indian Oceans  and the Caribbean Sea, and in some of the  world's major deltas, such as the Yangtze Delta and Mekong Delta.
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