Shanghai โฃSinking at an Alarming Rate, Amplifying Flood Risks, โฃNew study Finds
Shanghai, China – A new study published in the journal Nature revealsโฃ Shanghai is sinking faster than previously understood, exacerbating the threat of rising sea levels and increasing the risk ofโค catastrophic flooding. While rising seasโค pose aโข meaningful โthreat on their own, the city’s location onโ soft delta soilโค at the mouth of the โคYangtze River, combined with extensive groundwater extraction,โ is accelerating its descent.
The researchโค indicates that approximately 94% of Shanghai’s sinking is attributable toโ human activity,primarily the pumping of โgroundwater โfor industrial,construction,and residential purposes.โข In the 1960s,at the peak of water extraction,the city was sinking at a rate of 3.93 โขinches (10 โขcm) per year.Over the past century, some areas have subsided by more than a full meter. This rate of sinking outpaces sea-level rise, dramatically increasing vulnerability to flood and storm surge events.
The consequences extend โฃbeyond Shanghai. Other major Chineseโ cities situated โขin delta regions, including Shenzhen and Hong Kong, face similar โฃrisks. These areas are critical economic and manufacturing hubs,meaning disruptions fromโ flooding or land loss could significantly impact global supplyโ chains.
The sameโ dynamic threatens other megacities built on deltas worldwide, such as โJakarta, Manila, and โขNew York. Shanghai has begun to address the issue by tightening groundwater regulations andโค artificially recharging aquifers, which has slowed the rate of subsidence. However, the combined effects of rising seas โขand sinking land mean long-term risks โpersist.
Between 2001 and 2020, Shanghai alone incurred over $3 billion (USD) in โdamages due to subsidence. china’s total losses from this phenomenon currently average $1.5 billion per year. โฃResearchers emphasize that even small increases in sea level can have substantial consequences, making robust flood control, water management, and coastal engineering essential for โboth China’s economy and global trade stability.
“Deltas are great placesโฆbut they are really flatโฃ yet prone to human-caused subsidence, so sustained sea-level rise could submerge them really fast,” the research team stated.