According to a nasa research, high tide floods might become more common in the mid-2030s. Its goal has been to alert coastal populations across the world. The wobbling of the moon appears to be the catalyst for this. According to the study, the rise in floods would begin after a lunar cycle amplifies increasing sea levels due to the climate issue.
Long-term geological processes are causing land areas around the far northern coasts to rise, although this will take at least extra decade before flooding occurs. The study, which was reported in the publication "Nature Climate Change," is the first one to consider all known oceanic and astronomical drivers of floods, according to NASA.
Over 600 high-tide floods were reported by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in 2019. According to this estimate, in the 2030s, severe floods would occasionally occur in batches lasting over a month or more. It would be determined by the Moon's, Earth's, and Sun's locations. Every day, floods may occur in some cities.