Major sea-level rise caused by melting of
Greenland ice cap is ‘now inevitable’
Loss will contribute a minimum rise of 27cm regardless
of what climate action is taken, scientists discover
Damian
Carrington Environment editor
@dpcarrington
Mon 29 Aug
2022 16.00 BST
Major
sea-level rise from the melting of the Greenland ice cap is now inevitable,
scientists have found, even if the fossil fuel burning that is driving the
climate crisis were to end overnight.
The
research shows the global heating to date will cause an absolute minimum
sea-level rise of 27cm (10.6in) from Greenland alone as 110tn tonnes of ice
melt. With continued carbon emissions, the melting of other ice caps and
thermal expansion of the ocean, a multi-metre sea-level rise appears likely.
Billions of
people live in coastal regions, making flooding due to rising sea levels one of
the greatest long-term impacts of the climate crisis. If Greenland’s record
melt year of 2012 becomes a routine occurrence later this century, as is
possible, then the ice cap will deliver a “staggering” 78cm of sea-level rise,
the scientists said.
Previous
studies have used computer models of ice cap behaviour to estimate future
losses, but the physical processes are complex and this leads to significant
uncertainties in the results.
In
contrast, the study published in the journal Nature Climate Change used
satellite measurements of ice losses from Greenland and the shape of the ice
cap from 2000-19. This data enabled the scientists to calculate how far global
heating to date has pushed the ice sheet from an equilibrium where snowfall
matches the ice lost. This allowed the calculation of how much more ice must be
lost in order to regain stability.
“It is a
very conservative rock-bottom minimum,” said Prof Jason Box from the National
Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland (Geus), who led the research.
“Realistically, we will see this figure more than double within this century.”
The 27cm
estimate is a minimum because it only accounts for global heating so far and
because some ways in which glacier ice is lost at the margins of the ice sheet
are not included.
The
advantage of this study is that it provides a solid estimate of inevitable
sea-level rise but the method used does not give a timescale over which the ice
will be lost. Nonetheless, based on scientists’ overall understanding of how
sheets such as Greenland lose ice into the ocean, the researchers said most of
the rise would occur relatively soon. In 2021, other scientists warned that a
significant part of the Greenland ice sheet was on the brink of a tipping
point.
“The
minimum of 27cm is the sea-level rise deficit that we have accrued to date and
it’s going to get paid out, no matter what we do going forward,” said Dr
William Colgan, also at Geus. “Whether it’s coming in 100 years or 150 years,
it’s coming. And the sea-level rise we are committed to is growing at present,
because of the climate trajectory we’re on.”
Colgan
said: “If [2012] becomes a normal year, then the committed loss grows to 78cm,
which is staggering, and the fact that we’re already flickering into that range
[of ice loss] is shocking. But the difference between 78cm and 27cm highlights
the [difference] that can be made through implementing the Paris agreement.
There is still a lot of room to minimise the damage.”
Mountain
glaciers in the Himalayas and the Alps are already on course to lose a third
and half of their ice respectively, while the west Antarctic ice sheet is also
thought by some scientists to be past the point at which major losses are
inevitable. Warming oceans also expand, adding to sea-level rise.
“There is
growing support in the scientific literature for multi-metre levels of rise
within the next 100 to 200 years,” said Colgan. A collapse of the colossal east
Antarctic ice sheet, which would lead to a 52-metre rise in sea levels if it
all melted, could be averted if rapid climate action is taken.
Prof Gail
Whiteman, at the University of Exeter, who was not part of the study team,
said: “The results of this new study are hard to ignore for all business
leaders and politicians concerned about the future of humanity. It is bad news
for the nearly 600 million people that live in coastal zones worldwide. As sea
levels rise, they will be increasingly vulnerable, and it threatens
approximately $1tn of global wealth.” She said political leaders must rapidly
scale up funding for climate adaptation and damage.
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