Those who once lived on coastlines will face displacement and resettlement bottlenecks as they seek habitable places inland, researchers said.
"We're going to have more people on less land and sooner than we think," said Charles Geisler, professor at Cornell University in the US.
"The future rise in global mean sea level probably won't be gradual. Yet few policy makers are taking stock of the significant barriers to entry that coastal climate refugees, like other refugees, will encounter when they migrate to higher ground," Geisler said.
Feeding that population will require more arable land even as swelling oceans consume fertile coastal zones and river deltas, driving people to seek new places to dwell.
By 2060, about 1.4 billion people could be climate change refugees, according to the study. Geisler extrapolated that number to two billion by 2100.
"The colliding forces of human fertility, submerging coastal zones, residential retreat, and impediments to inland resettlement is a huge problem," he said.
"We offer preliminary estimates of the lands unlikely to support new waves of climate refugees due to the residues of war, exhausted natural resources, declining net primary productivity, desertification, urban sprawl, land concentration, 'paving the planet' with roads and greenhouse gas storage zones offsetting permafrost melt," Geisler said.
Beyond sea level rise, low-elevation coastal zones in many countries face intensifying storm surges that will push sea water further inland.
Historically, humans have spent considerable effort reclaiming land from oceans, but now live with the opposite - the oceans reclaiming terrestrial spaces on the planet," said Geisler.
In the study, researchers explored a worst-case scenario for the present century.
They note that the competition of reduced space will induce land-use trade-offs and conflicts. This could mean selling off public lands for human settlement.
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