Fate of ‘sleeping giant’ East Antarctic ice sheet
‘in our hands’ – study
Melting of the world’s biggest ice sheet would cause
catastrophic sea level rise, but can be avoided with fast climate action
Damian
Carrington Environment editor
@dpcarrington
Wed 10 Aug
2022 16.00 BST
The fate of
the world’s biggest ice sheet rests in the hands of humanity, a new analysis
has shown. If global heating is limited to 2C, the vast East Antarctic ice
sheet should remain stable, but if the climate crisis drives temperatures
higher, melting could drive up sea level by many metres.
The East
Antarctic ice sheet (EAIS) holds the vast majority of Earth’s glacier ice. Sea
levels would rise by 52 metres if it all melted. It was thought to be stable,
but is now showing signs of vulnerability, the scientists said.
The EAIS is
far larger than the West Antarctic ice sheet (WAIS), which hosts the so-called
“doomsday” Thwaites glacier, which has lost significant stability. Total loss
of the WAIS would cause 5 metres of sea level rise.
Sea level
is rising faster today than for at least 3,000 years, as mountain glaciers and
the Greenland ice cap melt, and ocean waters expand as they heat. Even a few
metres of sea level rise will redraw the map of the world, with profound
consequences for millions of people in coastal cities from New York City to
Shanghai.
The
Greenland ice sheet, which could deliver 7 metres of sea level rise, is on the
brink of a tipping point after which accelerated melting would become
inevitable, scientists warned in 2021. While the full impact of melting ice is
felt over centuries, researchers warned that the level of carbon emissions over
the next few decades will lock in future sea level rise.
The
analysis shows that keeping below 2C of global heating, the upper limit agreed
by the world’s nations in the 2015 Paris climate agreement, would result in
EAIS contributing less than 0.5m of sea level rise by 2300. But continued high
emissions and a temperature rise well above 2C would result in a rise of 1.5
metres to 3 metres by 2300 and up to 5 metres by 2500.
“The fate
of the EAIS remains very much in our hands,” said Prof Chris Stokes, at Durham
University in the UK, who led the study. “This ice sheet is by far the largest
on the planet and it’s really important that we do not awaken this sleeping
giant. We used to think ice sheets in East Antarctica were much less vulnerable
to climate change, compared to West Antarctica or Greenland, but we now know
there are some areas already showing signs of ice loss.”
In March,
the Conger ice shelf in East Antarctica collapsed, with scientists saying it
was “a sign of what might be coming”. In 2018, scientists found that a group of
glaciers spanning an eighth of the East Antarctic coastline were being melted
by the warming seas.
The new
analysis, published in the journal Nature, assessed the sensitivity of the EAIS
to global heating using data on how it responded to higher global temperatures
in the past, information on the changes happening now and computer simulations
of possible futures.
Significant
uncertainties remain, meaning the EAIS alone could cause more than 5 metres of
sea level rise in a worst-case scenario. In the best case scenario, the EAIS
may actually accumulate more ice, from snowfall, than it loses, meaning it
would slightly reduce sea level.
Prof Andrew
Mackintosh, at Monash University, Australia, who was not part of the study
team, said: “Vast areas of East Antarctica remain understudied, including the
most vulnerable basins that could contribute to sea level rise over coming
centuries.”
“Our
emissions choices will lead to very different future worlds,” Mackintosh said.
”Society needs to understand that one of the largest potential impacts of
global warming – the widespread loss of ice from East Antarctica – is possible
if climate warming exceeds about 2C.”
The
analysis includes data from the geological past showing that the last time CO2
concentrations in the atmosphere were higher than today was about 3myears ago.
Temperatures were then 2-4C higher – in the range the world could experience
later this century – and sea level eventually rose 10-25 metres higher than at
present. As recently as 400,000 years ago, part of the EAIS retreated 700km
inland when global temperature rose only 1-2C.
Prof
Nerilie Abram, a co-author of the analysis at the Australian National
University, said: “A key lesson from the past is that the East Antarctic Ice
Sheet is highly sensitive to even relatively modest warming scenarios. It isn’t
as stable and protected as we once thought.
“We now
have a very small window of opportunity to rapidly lower our greenhouse gas
emissions, limit the rise in global temperatures and preserve the East
Antarctic Ice Sheet,” she said.
The EAIS
was thought to be stable as much of it sits above sea level, meaning that
warming oceans cannot reach it and the only melting is from warmer air, which
is a much slower process. In contrast, the WAIS sits below sea level. However,
Stokes said: “Over the last decade or so, we’ve started to see the first
twitches from the EAIS, with some glaciers retreating and thinning.”
Taking
mountain glaciers and all ice caps into account, the Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change projects between 0.28 metres and 1 metre of sea level rise by
2100, depending on emissions.
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