Fear
of 'catastrophic' sea-level rise as ice sheets melt faster than
predicted
Most
experts believe they have underestimated the effects of climate
change, survey suggests
7
January, 2012
Glaciologists
fear they may have seriously underestimated the potential for melting
ice sheets to contribute to catastrophic sea-level rises in coming
decades which could see increases of a metre or more by 2100.
The
ice sheets of Greenland and Antarctica contain about 99.5 per cent of
the Earth's glacier ice and could raise sea levels by 65 metres if
they melted completely – although experts think this is highly
unlikely in the foreseeable future. However, a survey of the world's
top 26 glaciologists found most believe melting of the ice sheets
could be more rapid and severe than previously estimated. They
believe that melting of the ice sheets alone this century would be
likely to raise the average global sea level by 29cm, the poll found,
but there is a five per cent chance of it increasing even further by
a catastrophic 84cm.
This
would take the total sea-level increase to well over a metre if other
factors such as the thermal expansion of oceans and runoff from
mountain glaciers are taken into account.
"Our
analysis shows the biggest uncertainty when it comes to sea levels is
the contribution from the ice sheets," said Professor Jonathan
Bamber of Bristol University, lead author of the study published in
the journal Nature Climate Change.
"It
shows glaciologists believe there is a one-in-20 chance of sea levels
rising by a metre or more by 2100, and a metre rise in sea level is
really very serious.
"The
impacts of sea-level rise of this magnitude are potentially severe,
implying a conceivable risk of the forced displacement of up to 187
million people within this century."
Rising
sea levels are one of the greatest uncertainties of climate change. A
warmer world causes oceans to expand thermally but also leads to
faster melting of mountain glaciers and some regions of the polar ice
sheets.
However,
glaciologists are uncertain about how the ice sheets will respond to
increasing global temperatures and climate change, Professor Bamber
said.
One
of the most challenging issues facing glaciologists is working out
how much of the melting of the Greenland and West Antarctic Ice Sheet
is due to natural variation and how much is due to emissions of
man-made greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, he said.
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