Bernama 23 Jul 10;
BANGKOK, July 23 (Bernama) -- Thailand's capital of Bangkok is under threat of being underwater within a century, researchers predicted, warning that current flood prevention measures are not ready to prevent such disaster, Thai News Agency reported Friday.
The prediction comes from research study calculations indicating that land in Bangkok on average subsides about one centimetre annually.
The study is a cooperative project on geo-dynamics called 'Geodetic Earth Observation Technologies for Thailand: Environmental Change Detection and Investigation' -- GEO2TECDI -- between Thai-based and European Union institutes.
According to Chulalongkorn University's Survey Engineering Department, data from satellites 15 years ago, indicated that the earth's tectonic plates have lifted up slowly.
"But the big earthquakes in Indonesia's Sumatra Island in 2004 which caused the Andaman Sea tsunami quickly resulted in a shrinkage of the tectonics of around one centimetre annually, while the subsidence of soil layers for the past decade in Bangkok and its vicinity has continued to subside-- data which matched that of the Royal Thai Survey Department," the study said.
Despite such statistics, researchers have not yet determined conclusively when the Thai capital will enter its critical stage of moving into a waterworld.
The second phase of research is yet to be conducted to create a model for an accurate forecast, Thai News Agency quoted the study as saying.
According to current estimates, the land beneath Bangkok can sink to as low as sea level in a hundred years, when comparing land subsidence ratio to Bangkok's ground, which now is only on average one metre above sea level.
It is predicted that land on the banks of the Chao Phraya River will be the first to be affected.
"The ground level is very low in Bangkok, and some areas are only a few centimetres above the mean sea level, which means that all factors seem to join forces to negatively affect us.
"The sea level is rising quickly. The level of soil and sand subsides, and the tectonics shrink. All this is worrying," said Assoc Prof Itthi Trisirisatayawong of Chulalongkorn Unjiversity's Survey Engineering Department.
Also, Thailand's capital may sink faster than we now expect, for the sea level in the Gulf of Thailand is continually rising, which is also shown by data of the Hydrographic Department dating back some 30 years.
That data demonstrated that the sea level in the Gulf has continually risen around 4 millimetres per year. The accelerating factors for the increasing sea level include global warming causing glaciers to melt and the enlargement of the oceans.
Meanwhile, Hydro and Agro Informatics Institute director Royol Chitradon said that the pattern of air flow and of currents in the ocean has changed, which also generates higher waves.
"Currents at the South Pole can also create high waves of over 10 metres, which is almost as high as waves in a tsunami. Now the currents at both the North and the South Poles are very strong, and they result in higher waves in the Gulf of Thailand and the Andaman Sea," said Royol.
Some experts believe that Thailand's City of Angels might even sink within half a decade coming up when the ratio of land subsidence is calculated with the annual rising sea level and the outcome compared to the ability of Bangkok's flood prevention and mitigation system.
If no solution is discovered soon, we may have to migrate to other parts of the country so as to make sure our children will stay on solid ground when the capital finally becomes a part of the ocean.
The cooperation project aims to increase skills and Thai-EU joint research capabilities of Thai researchers in applying and exploiting three space geodetic techniques for the detection, observation and modelling of the change and movement of the tectonic plates beneath Thailand, Bangkok's land subsidence, and sea level changes in the Gulf of Thailand.
The techniques for the detection are namely Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS), Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) and Satellite Altimetry (SALT).
-- BERNAMA