World

Antarctica to lift seas by metres per degree of warming, study finds

The change will redraw the map of the world’s coastlines over hundreds of years

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 24 Sep 2020 9:30AM

Antarctica to lift seas by metres per degree of warming, study finds
This Nasa handout photo on March 29 shows ripples in the surface of Denman Glacier in East Antarctica. – AFP pic, September 24, 2020

PARIS – Raising Earth’s average surface temperature another degree Celsius will lock in 2.5 metres of sea level rise from Antarctica alone and an extra three degrees see the frozen continent lift oceans 6.5 metres, scientists warned today.

These devastating increases in the global waterline – enough to cripple coastal cities from Mumbai to Miami and displace hundreds of millions of people – would unfold over hundreds to thousands of years.

But the man-made greenhouse gas emissions that could guarantee such an outcome are on track to occur on a timescale measured in decades, they reported in the journal Nature.

One of the study’s most alarming conclusions is that hikes in sea level caused by a disintegrating Antarctic ice sheet – which holds enough frozen water to boost oceans 58 metres – would become dramatically larger with each additional degree of warming.

Sea level rise, for example, would average about 1.3 metres for each of the first two degrees above pre-industrial levels.

Earth’s average surface temperature has already gone up one degree since the late 19th century, enough to enhance the severity of deadly heatwaves, droughts and tropical cyclones.

But from 2C to 6C above that benchmark, the increase in sea level would double to 2.4 metres per degree of warming.

At the upper end of that range, climate change would devastate civilisation and redraw the map of the world’s coastlines, scientists say.

Beyond that, each added degree would result in 10 more metres, pushing the entire ice sheet past the point of no return and lifting oceans to levels not seen for millions of years.

“In the end, it is our burning of coal and oil that determines if and when critical temperature thresholds in Antarctica are crossed,” co-author Anders Levermann, a climate scientist at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, said in a statement.

An ‘existential threat’

“And even if the ice loss happens on long time scales, the respective carbon dioxide levels can already be reached in the near future.”

The ice sheet atop West Antarctica will be the first to go, eroded not so much by warm air but rather warm sea water seeping below the underbelly of glaciers and eroding their ocean-facing edges, known as ice shelves.

“That makes glaciers the size of Florida slide into the ocean,” said co-author Torsten Albrecht, also a researcher at the Potsdam Institute.

Once global warming crosses the 6C threshold, the dynamic changes.

“As the gigantic mountains of ice” – up to five kilometres thick – “slowly sink to lower heights where the air is warmer, this leads to more melt at the ice surface,” Albrecht added.

This process has already created raging rivers of meltwater on the Greenland ice sheet, which saw a net loss of more than half-a-trillion tonnes in mass last year alone.

“This very important and timely study makes clear the urgent need to stabilise surface temperature rise in line with Paris Agreement targets so as to limit the total committed sea level rise to a few metres,” said Matt Palmer, a UK Met Office sea level rise scientist who did not take part in the research.

The 2015 treaty enjoins nations to cap global warming at “well below” 2C, and 1.5C if possible.

Even a 2C world “represents an existential threat to entire nation states,” Jonathan Bamber, a glaciology professor at the University of Bristol, told the Science Media Centre, commenting on the study.

“We’re looking at removing nations from the map – it doesn’t get much more serious than that.” – AFP, September 24, 2020

Related News

World / 3y

AFP journalist killed in rocket attack in Eastern Ukraine

World / 3y

China resumes construction on fifth Antarctic base: think tank

Malaysia / 3y

Sabahan to be first M’sian scientist to conduct winter research in Antarctica

World / 3y

Turkiye-Syria quake deaths to top 50,000: UN relief chief

Entertainment / 4y

'Strange' reigns but 'Downton' shows class on N.America screens

Entertainment / 4y

Depp lawyers wrap up cross-examination of Amber Heard

Spotlight

Malaysia

Jana Wibawa: Muhyiddin's instructions were to consider, not approve the project - Tengku Zafrul

World

Trump declares Iran peace accord 'over'

Malaysia

Rembau Undang’s office ordered to vacate premises within 24 hours amid adat dispute

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir

Malaysia

Don't repeat old mistakes, five ships must be completed according to cost and schedule – PAC

Malaysia

Friends in Putrajaya, rivals in Johor: Election exposes new realities of coalition politics

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir

World

Search intensifies off Karachi after Pakistan cargo jet vanishes following mid-air navigation failure

Malaysia

Salesman gets 10 years jail for slashing motorcyclist with meat cleaver

Malaysia

Thai PM Anutin to make first official visit to Malaysia with border connectivity in focus

Malaysia

Young voters could decide Johor election outcome as parties battle for new electorate

You may be interested

World

Fresh US strikes on Iran deepen ceasefire crisis as Trump warns of escalation

World

Tehran retaliates against US bases in the Gulf

World

61 passengers leave Bangladesh airport after visa checks halt Malaysia-bound flight travellers

World

US-Iran ceasefire under renewed strain as Washington launches fresh strikes

World

21 dead after landslide buries workers in China’s Gansu province

World

Bomb blasts near Damascus hotel during Macron visit highlight Syria’s fragile security

World

Search intensifies off Karachi after Pakistan cargo jet vanishes following mid-air navigation failure

World

Trump declares Iran peace accord 'over'