November 16, 2023
By Evan
Bush
2 degrees, 40 feet: Scientists who
study Earth’s ice say we could be committed to disastrous sea level
rise
A new report details that ice sheets
are melting quicker than expected and
that the world will need to ramp up its climate efforts to avert
disastrous sea level rise.
Antarctica's Thwaites Glacier has the potential to add several inches
to global sea levels.James
Yungel / NASA file
Top scientists say the world’s ice sheets are melting more rapidly
than expected and that world leaders must ramp up their climate
ambitions to avoid a catastrophic rise in sea levels.
A report released Thursday from the International Cryosphere Climate
Initiative, a network of policy experts and researchers, pleads with
world leaders to heed their warnings as they gather for the United
Nations’ COP28 climate conference later this month. The report says if
global average temperatures settle at 2 degrees Celsius above the
preindustrial baseline, the planet could be committed to more than 40
feet of sea-level rise — a melt that would take centuries and reshape
societies across the globe.
The collapse of ice sheets and ice shelves has been a major point of
uncertainty within the climate science community. But a flurry of new
research suggests that dangerous tipping points are nearer than once
thought and that there is likely less room in Earth’s carbon budget
than expected.
“We might be reaching these temperature thresholds that we’ve been
talking about for a long time sooner than we were thinking about years
ago,” said Rob DeConto, the director of the University of
Massachusetts Amherst School of Earth & Sustainability and an author
of the report. “And it may be that the thresholds for some of these
processes that can drive really rapid ice loss are lower than we were
thinking just a few years ago.”
Without a dramatic turn in the pace of climate action, those factors
could leave humanity “facing rates of sea-level rise way outside the
range of adaptability,” DeConto said.
In the report, the scientists argue a rise in global temperatures of 2
degrees Celsius would force many to flee coastal communities.
“We’re displacing millions of people with the decisions being made
now,” said report author Julie Brigham-Grette, a geosciences professor
at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.
More than 60 scientists contributed to the report. Many are experts in
their specialties, and some have worked on past reports for the U.N.’s
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the world’s leading body on
assessing the climate crisis.
In the IPCC’s 2021 report, scientists estimated that sea level will
rise about 0.9 to 3.3 feet (0.28 to 1.01 meters) by 2100, but also
said those numbers didn’t factor in uncertainties around ice sheets
like the ones scientists have been probing more deeply in the past few
years.
New studies suggest that melting ice sheets are a greater cause for
concern than the IPCC had considered.
“Many ice sheet scientists now believe that by 2°C, nearly all of
Greenland, much of West Antarctica, and even vulnerable portions of
East Antarctica will be triggered to very long-term, inexorable
sea-level rise, even if air temperatures later decrease,” the new ICCI
report says.
The new report also outlines how the declining mass of mountain
glaciers threatens hydropower supplies and endangers drinking water
sources, how permafrost could intensify warming by releasing massive
amounts of methane, and how polar waters are becoming increasingly
acidified, which threatens the survival of shell-building creatures
like krill and crab.
U.S. warming 60% faster than world as a whole.
World leaders in 2015 agreed to limit warming to well below 2 degrees
C and also to aim for 1.5 degrees. But many countries are struggling
to cut fossil fuels from their economies, and efforts remain off pace
to limit warming. A 2022 U.N. report found the planet was on track to
warm about 2.8 C above preindustrial times by 2100.
A recent United Nations Environment Programme report found that world
leaders plan to extract and produce twice the amount of fossil fuels
needed to keep global temperatures from exceeding 1.5 degrees C.
This year, scientists have observed a slew of concerning signs for the
world’s ice.
Antarctic sea ice reached its lowest-ever maximum since scientists
began measuring in 1979, a possible sign that climate change could be
making an impact in what has been a more resilient region for sea ice.
Swiss glaciers lost about 10% of their remaining mass in the past two
years, the report says. And Greenland experienced the second-highest
surface melt in recorded history.
Meanwhile, scientists revealed new research that suggests the collapse
of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet might already be inevitable and that
Greenland’s glaciers are melting at five times the rate they were 20
years ago. And another group of scientists found that the remaining
carbon budget to limit warming was far smaller than once thought. At
the current pace, the scientists believe global average temperatures
will reach 1.5 degrees Celsius above preindustrial levels in about six
years.
The authors hope the new ICCI report will influence negotiations at
COP28, the climate discussions among world leaders that are slated to
take place in Dubai from Nov. 30 to Dec. 12.
“We’re committing today’s kindergartners to a very different future,”
Brigham-Grette said, adding that policymakers’ “selective hearing is
the problem.”
Added DeConto: “While some change has already been set in motion, the
truly dire impacts of cryosphere loss can be avoided with immediate
reductions in carbon emissions.”
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