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However, to understand more about how climate change is affecting these sensitive regions, "there is also an urgent need to determine how ice thickness is changing," the agency said. For coastal cities and islands, the information may be a question of survival. If all of the Earth's polar ice and glaciers were to melt, sea levels could rise up to 230 feet (70 meters), Miller said. If only Greenland became ice-free, it would mean a 21.33-foot (6.5-meter) rise, he said. Pessimists expect a sea rise by 2 to 3 meters (6.6 feet to 9.8 feet) by the year 2100, he said. In its 2007 report, the world's leading climate change scientists on the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) project only some 20 to 60 centimeters (7.9 inches to 23.6 inches), but without calculating the possibility of a dramatic increase in the rate of polar ice melt. "It is just very hard to predict this," because there are multiple reasons for the loss of ice mass
-- not only warming, but also changes in sea currents, Miller said. "By repeated observation, we hope to register even small changes within a brief period of time." ___ On the Net: http://www.ESA.int/
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