To
truly grasp what we’re doing to the planet, you need to understand
this gigantic measurement
Chris Money
This June 13, 2013 handout photo provided by NASA shows the ice front of Venable Ice Shelf, West Antarctica, in October 2008. (AFP PHOTO / NASA/JPL-Caltech/UC Irvine)
1
July, 2015
There’s
been a lot of news
lately about
the losses of ice from the planet’s two gigantic ice sheets,
Greenland and Antarctica. And not surprisingly, some people have
found it very stunning — simply because the volumes of ice involved
sound so huge.
For
instance, after I wrote
about
a new study showing a disturbing increase in ice loss from one
relatively small part of the Antarctic ice sheet, I saw the following
tweet from Moby — yes, that Moby:
Antarctic currently losing 56,000,000,000 tons of ice every year. goodbye, humanity. http://t.co/eINvMeqWkJ
— moby XⓋX (@thelittleidiot) May 22, 201
Actually,
that’s just the losses for one region of Antarctica, the Southern
Antarctic Peninsula. Total losses are much larger. But the tweet
— and the general magnitude of the kinds of changes that we’re
seeing — got me thinking. It can be hard to comprehend the scale of
these events, so it would be helpful to break it down into more
comprehensible pieces.
Scientists
often measure the loss of ice from the planet’s two gigantic ice
sheets, Greenland and Antarctica, in a particular unit called a
“gigaton,” which is sometimes also spelled “gigatonne.”
Either way, it’s not something you encounter in your ordinary life,
because it’s incredibly “giga-ntic” — the kind of unit that
planets depend on.
In
the International
System of Units,
the prefix “giga” means 109, or one billion (1,000,000,000).
Hence terms like “gigawatt” or
“gigahertz.” Thus, a gigaton is equivalent to a billion metric
tons.
A
male African elephant might weigh, at most, 6.8 metric
tons, according
to the
San Diego Zoo. So a gigaton is well over a hundred million
African elephants. As for sea life, the blue whale can weigh as much
as 146
metric tons,
according to NOAA. So a gigaton is more than 6 million blue whales.
Or
for another analogy, consider how Meredith Nettles of the
Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory at Columbia University recently
described
a gigaton-sized piece of ice to me:
“If you
took the whole National Mall, and covered it up with ice, to a height
about four times as high as the [Washington] monument,” says
Nettles, you’d have about a gigaton of ice. “All the way down
from the Capitol steps to the Lincoln Memorial.”
With
this in mind, let’s now look at how much ice Antarctica is losing,
before moving on to the other sources of major ice loss, like
Greenland.
A recent
scientific paper estimated
the total annual loss for Antarctica at 159 gigatons (plus or minus
48 gigatons, since these measurements are subject to considerable
uncertainty). Other scientific estimates vary — Jonathan
Bamber,
an Antarctic expert at the University of Bristol, recently gave me a
lower estimate — 130 gigatons per year. Yet another, even
lower recent
estimate is
92 gigatons per year. Whatever the exact number, Antarctica is
clearly losing billions of African elephants worth of ice each
year.
Climate
change doubters, faced with such numbers, sometimes like to point out
that East Antarctica is gaining some ice — but there is still a net
loss of ice to the ocean because of massive losses in West
Antarctica, the most vulnerable part of the Antarctic continent. And
it’s not as if we should be exactly content about the status
of East Antarctica, either. The gigantic Totten Glacier of East
Antarctica is losing 70 gigatons of ice per year, “enough to fill
Sydney Harbour every two and a half days,” as one scientist with
the Australian Antarctic Climate and Ecosystems Cooperative Research
Center puts
it.
“It
is common to see broad stroke comparisons between East and West
Antarctica for the sake of convenience, however, doing so risks
diminishing the fact that there is net mass loss occurring in a large
area of East Antarctica, as well,” Jamin Greenbaum, lead
author of a recent
study of
Totten Glacier, told me by email. “It is well established that the
region encompassing the Aurora Subglacial Basin and Totten Glacier is
losing mass and contributing to sea level at a rate that is large
compared to variability in snowfall indicating that the losses are
due to processes beyond snowfall (e.g. enhanced ocean melting).”
Moreover,
the rate of ice loss from Antarctica has been increasing, and
scientists keep finding new sources.
So
what does it all mean? It takes 360 gigatons of ice to raise the
global sea level 1 millimeter, Bamber told me. So right now,
Antarctica is doing that about once every three years. Globally,
though, sea level is going up at an increasing rate of 2.6
to 2.9 millimeters per year,
according to the latest research, because Antarctica isn’t the only
contributor.
The
gigantic Greenland ice sheet, which is facing rapidly rising Arctic
temperatures, is also contributing, and at least for now, appears to
be throwing off much more ice than Antarctica. A recent
study put
the loss at 378 gigatons per year for the years between 2009 and
2012. That’s a millimeter per year right there. Indeed, recent
research suggests that some glacial iceberg calvings — from, say,
Greenland’s Helheim Glacier — can be as
large as a gigaton at a single time.
Glaciers
around the world are also contributing — and at the scale of many
gigatons. Indeed, recent research suggests that the
glaciers of Alaska alone are
now contributing 75 gigatons per year, which is very large number,
considering that they only constitute about 11 percent of the world’s
glaciers.
Warm
ocean water also expands, so in addition to ice loss, the oceans are
also growing in volume due to their temperature. And for those
who don’t think 2 or 3 millimeters per year of ocean rise is a big
deal — the real concern, with both Greenland and Antarctica (and
also Alaska), is that these rates are increasing.
And
why might that be happening?
It’s
because of the 34
gigatons annually of
carbon dioxide that humanity is currently putting in the atmosphere.
In 2013, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change estimated that
to have a good chance of keeping global warming under 2 degrees
Celsisus above pre-industrial times — a widely embraced
international goal — humanity had, as of the year 2011, only
about 1000 gigatons of CO2 left that it could emit. Divide 1000 by 34
and you get maybe 3 decades more of emissions at current levels. And
that assumes that emissions merely stay constant, rather than rising
along with rising economic growth.
When
it comes to our gigatons of carbon dioxide emitted each year, NOAA’s
Earth System Research Laboratory has
done some
fascinating math (which starts with a relatively simple conversion
of gigatons of carbon dioxide into gigatons of carbon):
In
2010 about 9 Giga-tons of Carbon (GtC) were emitted from burning
fossil fuels as 33 Giga-tons of CO2 gas.
How
much is 9 Giga-ton? 9 billion tons or 9,000,000,000,000,000 grams, or
19,800,000,000,000 poundаs.
Can
you imagine…9 Giga-tons is the weight of about 132 billion people.
The amount of carbon we are putting into the atmosphere each year is
equal to 20 times the weight of the current world population.
All
of which further underscores that the gigaton is the unit that
really explains to you how we’re altering the planet —
changing its atmosphere, and changing its oceans, at a scale that’s
hard for humans to conceive of. Net gigatons of CO2 are going
into the atmosphere and net gigatons of H2O are going into the ocean.
And if you wanted to reshape a planet, it’s hard to think of a
better recipe than that.
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