It's irrelevant. You will still be covered in water. All that has happened is to delay the inevitable.
Why is it inevitable? Tides go out as well as in.
All the discussion about climate change seems to pretend that we are somehow going to be able to magically preserve the current climate we've got indefinitely. It's still avoiding the inevitable - the tide WILL come in and you will be wet whether or not you're wading into it. Now, how are you going to deal with the inevitable outcome?
Take my shoes and socks off and roll up my trousers. If I am properly informed and have judged it right I will end up with nothing more than wet ankles. Marching forward in a sort of inverse Canute maneuver does not give me even that much certainty.
Climate
change might be inevitable, that it proceeds uniformly in one direction and rate is not.
S. Pacala and R. Socolow proposed a seven wedge strategy to stabalise our emissions, potentially giving us time to devise means or further reducing them. Anthropogenic greenhouse gases are a
forcing mechanism, and constitute one thing we
do (potentially) control. The idea is not to fix the climate forever-and-ever, it's to reduce its variability to natural levels by controlling our effects upon it.
Natural variability, we have had some success at handling.
After all it's clearly difficult enough for our civilization to even deal with changing enough to slow down the inevitable - jeez, how difficult do you think it will be to persuade people to deal with the changes required for the inevitable?
By pointing out that the
worst effects may not (yet) be inevitable? That the choice of outcomes may lie somewhere between 'fairly bad' and 's<rule8>t-curdlingly bad' and which would they prefer? That business as usual may be the
more difficult/expensive option? That mitigating the
causes may be cheaper and more effective than mitigating the
effects?
It's the difference between handling 1 million climate refugees a year for 10 years and having all 10 million on your doorstep at once.