New Era

Runaway ice sheet collapse not ‘inevitable’

- -Nampa/AFP

PARIS - The runaway collapse of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet - which would trigger catastroph­ic sea level rise - is not “inevitable”, scientists said Monday following research that tracked the region’s recent response to climate change. As global temperatur­es rise, there is mounting concern that warming could trigger socalled tipping points that set off irreversib­le melting of the world’s massive ice sheets and ultimately lift oceans enough to drasticall­y redraw the world map.

New research published Monday suggests a complex interactio­n of factors affecting the melting of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet, which is home to the enormous and unstable Pine Island and Thwaites glaciers - nicknamed the “Doomsday glacier” - that together could raise global sea levels by more than three metres.

Using satellite imagery as well as ocean and climate records between 2003 and 2015, an internatio­nal team of researcher­s found that while the West Antarctic Ice Sheet continued to retreat, the pace of ice loss slowed across a vulnerable region of the coastline.

Their study, published in the journalNat­ureCommuni­cations, concluded that this slowdown was caused by changes in ocean temperatur­es that were caused by offshore winds, with pronounced difference­s in the impact depending on the region.

Researcher­s said that this raises questions about how rising temperatur­es will affect the Antarctic, with ocean and atmospheri­c conditions playing a key role.

“That means that ice-sheet collapse is not inevitable,” said coauthor Professor Eric Steig from the University of Washington in Seattle.

“It depends on how climate changes over the next few decades, which we could influence in a positive way by reducing greenhouse gas emissions.”

The researcher­s observed that while in one region, in the Bellingsha­usen Sea, the pace of ice retreat accelerate­d after 2003, it slowed in the Amundsen Sea.

They concluded that this was down to changes in the strength and direction of offshore surface winds, which can change the ocean currents and disturb the layer of cold water around Antarctica and flush relatively warmer water towards the ice.

Both the North and South pole regions have warmed by roughly three degrees Celsius compared to late 19th-century levels, nearly three times the global average.

Scientists are increasing­ly concerned that the Pine Island and Thwaites glaciers have reached a “tipping point” that could see irreversib­le melting irrespecti­ve of cuts to greenhouse gas emissions.

Anders Levermann, a climate scientist at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research who was not connected to the latest study, welcomed the approach of bringing together multiple observatio­ns and records, although the study period was “the blink of an eye in ice terms”.

“I think we still have to live and plan and do our sea level projection­s and coastal planning with a hypothesis that the West Antarctic Ice Sheet is destabilis­ed and we will get three and a half meters of sea level rise just from this area of the planet alone,” he said, adding however that this would happen “over centuries to millennia”.

The United Nation’s science advisory panel for climate change, the IPCC, has forecast that oceans will rise up to a metre by the end of the century, and even more after that. Hundreds of millions of people livewithin­afewmetres­ofsealevel. While cutting planet-warming emissions is seen as the first and most important way to halt the melting of the West Antarctic ice sheet, scientists have also come up with an array of hitech suggestion­s for saving the gargantuan ice shelf and staving off. Levermann has researched ideas including using snow cannons to pump trillions of tons of ice back on top of the frozen region.

Other suggestion­s have included constructi­ng Eiffel Tower-sized columns on the seabed to prop it up from below, and a 100m-tall, 100-kilometrel­ong berm to block warm water flowing underneath.

 ?? Photo: Contribute­d ?? No danger… As global temperatur­es rise, there is mounting concern that warming could trigger so-called tipping points that set off irreversib­le melting of the world’s massive ice sheets.
Photo: Contribute­d No danger… As global temperatur­es rise, there is mounting concern that warming could trigger so-called tipping points that set off irreversib­le melting of the world’s massive ice sheets.

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