Rate of melt has accelerated
threefold in last five years and could contribute 25cm to sea-level rises
without urgent action
Ice in the Antarctic is
melting at a record-breaking rate and the subsequent sea rises could have
catastrophic consequences for cities around the world, according to two new
studies.
A report led by scientists in
the UK and US found the rate of melting from the Antarctic ice sheet has
accelerated threefold in the last five years and is now vanishing faster than
at any previously recorded time.
A separate study warns that
unless urgent action is taken in the next decade the melting ice could
contribute more than 25cm to a total global sea level rise of more than a metre
by 2070. This could lead eventually to the collapse of the entire west
Antarctic ice sheet, and around 3.5m of sea-level rise.
Prof Andrew Shepherd, from
Leeds University and a lead author of the study on accelerating ice loss, said:
“We have long suspected that changes in Earth’s climate will affect the polar
ice sheets. Thanks to our satellites our space agencies have launched, we can
now track their ice losses and global sea level contribution with confidence.”
He said the rate of melting
was “surprising.”
“This has to be a cause for
concern for the governments we trust to protect our coastal cities and
communities,” Shepherd added.
The study, published in
Nature, involved 84 scientists from 44 international organisations and claims
to be the most comprehensive account of the Antarctic ice sheet to date. It
shows that before 2012, the Antarctic lost ice at a steady rate of 76bn tonnes
per year - a 0.2mm per year contribution to sea-level rise. However since then
there has been a sharp increase, resulting in the loss of 219bn tonnes of ice
per year - a 0.6mm per year sea-level contribution.
The second study, also
published in Nature, warns that time is running out to save the Antarctic and
its unique ecosystem - with potentially dire consequences for the world.
The scientists assessed the
probable state of Antarctica in
2070 under two scenarios. The first in which urgent action on greenhouse gas
emissions and environmental protection is taken in the next few years, the
second if emissions continue to rise unabated and the Antarctic is exploited
for its natural resources.
The scenario which plays out
largely depends on choices made over the next decade, on both climate-change
and on environmental regulation, they conclude.
Co-author Profe Martin Siegert,
from the Grantham Institute,
said: “Some of the changes Antarctica will face are already irreversible, such
as the loss of some ice shelves, but there is a lot we can prevent or reverse.
“To avoid the worst impacts,
we will need strong international cooperation and effective regulation backed
by rigorous science. This will rely on governments recognising that Antarctica
is intimately coupled to the rest of the Earth system, and damage there will
cause problems everywhere.”
As well as being a major cause
of sea-level rise, scientists say the oceans around Antarctica are a key
“carbon sink” - absorbing huge amounts of greenhouse gases helping to mitigate
the impacts of climate change.
Siegert said: “If the
political landscape of a future Antarctica is more concerned with rivalry, and
how each country can get the most out of the continent and its oceans, then all
protections could be overturned.
“However, if we recognise the
importance of Antarctica in the global environment, then there is the potential
for international co-operation that uses evidence to enact changes that avoid
‘tipping points’ – boundaries that once crossed, would cause runaway change,
such as the collapse of the west Antarctic ice sheet.”
Greenpeace which is
campaigning for a large tract of the ocean surrounding the Antarctic to be made
into the world’s biggest ocean sanctuary, said government’s must heed the
warning.
Louisa Casson, of Greenpeace
UK’s Protect the Antarctic campaign, said: “Governments can take a historic
step forward in October this year if they decide to create an Antarctic Ocean
Sanctuary, protecting 1.8 million square kilometres in what would be the
largest protected area on Earth.
“Ocean sanctuaries create havens
for marine life to build resilience to a changing ocean, but also crucially
help us avoid the worst effects of climate change, by preserving healthy ocean
ecosystems that play a vital role storing carbon.”
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