Deccan Chronicle

Antarctica, Greenland ice sheet melting, says study

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Antarctica, Greenland, Sept. 2: Increasing melting rates for ice sheets in Antarctica and Greenland match worst-case scenarios for climate warming, potentiall­y exposing 16 million people to annual coastal flooding by the end of the century, warned a new study.

The global sea level rose by 1.8 centimetre­s because of the rapid melting rates of the ice sheets since the 1990s. Increasing melting rates will raise sea levels by a further 17 cm, according to the study led by Tom Slater from the Centre for Polar Observatio­n and Modelling at the University of Leeds, United Kingdom.

The study — published in journal Nature Climate

Change on August 31, 2020 — compared the latest results from satellite surveys from the Ice Sheet Mass Balance Intercom

parison Exercise (IMBIE), with calculatio­ns from climate models.

The IMBIE is a joint collaborat­ion establishe­d bet

ween scientists supported by the European Space Agency and the United States’ National Aeronautic­s and Space Admin

ONE OF the primary causes for the rise in global sea levels was thermal expansion, involving the volume of seawater expanding once it gets warmer. Ice melt from ice sheets and mountain glaciers, however, overtook global warming as the main cause of rising sea levels in the past five years.

istration in 2011. Melting from Antarctica pushed sea levels up by 7.2 millimetre­s, while Greenland accounted for 10.6 mm, with latest measuremen­ts pointing out a rise in the world's oceans by four mm every year. One of the primary causes for the rise in global sea levels was thermal expansion, involving the volume of seawater expanding once it gets warmer. Ice melt from ice sheets and mountain glaciers, however, overtook global warming as the main cause of rising sea levels in the past five years. “The melting is overtaking the climate models we use to guide us. We are in danger of being unprepared for the risks posed by sea level rise,” said Slater.

Ice sheets lost ice at rates predicted by the worstcase scenarios put forth in the last report by the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change, warned the authors.

The 17 cm-rise in sea levels from ice sheets alone was enough to double the frequency of storm-surge flooding in the largest coastal cities, said Anna Hogg, a co-author and climate researcher in the School of Earth and Environmen­t at Leeds.

Ice sheets from Antarctica and Greenland were not the only ones causing water rise, according to Ruth Mottram, study coauthor and climate researcher at the Danish Meteorolog­ical Institute.

“In recent years, thousands of smaller glaciers have begun to melt or disappear altogether, as we saw with the glacier Ok in Iceland.” —

 ??  ?? The global sea level has risen by 1.8 centimetre­s because of the rapid melting rates of the ice sheets since the 1990s. —Agencies
The global sea level has risen by 1.8 centimetre­s because of the rapid melting rates of the ice sheets since the 1990s. —Agencies

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