Sea levels began to rise 18k years ago at the end of the last glacial period. They have risen about 135 meters since then which is an average of 7.5 millimeters per year. That is an average of 750 mm per century (29.5 inches) which is far more than the average over the last century.
From 1880 to 2000 sea level rose about 20 cm or just under 8 inches. Far less than the nearly 30 inches per century average over the last 18,000 years.
The most recent data from NASA shows a decline in sea level.
Inconvenient: NASA shows global sea level pausing, instead of rising
If it doesn’t agree with the agenda, then IT IS NOT SCIENCE.
There are islands in the Pacific that are two inches above sea level... They will be the first to go under if there is ANY sea level rise. There has been ZERO change in these islands...
Curious... isn’t the displacement of ice (frozen water) in water greater than the equivalent in liquid water?
Wouldn’t melting glaciers result in a reduction of the sea level instead of an increase?
I guess that you would have to account for melting ice and snow on land.