Earth's
Ice Is Melting Much Faster Than Forecast. Here's Why That's Worrying.
Jason
E. Box
Professor
in Glaciology, Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland
4
August, 2015
COPENHAGEN
-- For me it was only after eight years of studying Greenland --
installing and maintaining a network of on-ice climate stations and
examining how much snow evaporates from the island -- that I suddenly
realized glaciology textbooks needed a major revision. This was 2002.
Prior to the epiphany, conventional knowledge held that the ice sheet
was frozen at its bed and so the reaction time of the ice sheet to
climate warming was measured in tens of thousands of years. A heck of
a long time.
Climate
warming had just infiltrated Greenland glaciology in earnest. Summer
melt water, it turned out, drains down quickly to the bed,
lubricating the glacier's flow. Suddenly we realized an expanding
melt season meant the ice sheet would
be sliding faster, longer.
It was not to be the only time our philosophy got hit with a major
surprise that connected the ice sheet with climate change and the
threat of abrupt sea level rise.
The
next one came in 2006.
Somehow
all marine-terminating glaciers across the southern half of
Greenland
doubled in
speed simultaneously between 2000 and 2005. We didn't yet know why.
In
the meantime, scientists tried
defining a
plausible upper limit for the contribution to sea level rise from
Greenland's ice. That was at a time when surging glacier speeds --
ice flow -- was thought to be the dominant conveyer of ice loss, and
would be for the foreseeable future. Well -- surprise! -- it became
clear that for six years in a row, starting in 2007, ice loss from
surface meltwater runoff took
over the
lead position in the competition for biggest loser. From 2007 to
2012, nearly each summer set higher and higher melt records, owing to
persistent and unforseen weather that by 2012 would become a
signature of climate change.
The
competition between how much ice is lost through glacier flows into
fjords versus meltwater runoff is intimately synergistic with
meltwater interacting with ice flow all along the way. Increasing
melt sends more
water down through the ice sheet, softening the ice so it flows
faster. Once at the bed the water lubricates flow. Squirting out the
front of glaciers into the sea, the meltwater drives
a heat exchange that undercuts glaciers,
promoting calving, loss of flow resistance and faster flow. Put it
this way: in Washington, D.C., to know what's happening, you follow
the money; in Greenland you follow the meltwater.
Put it this way: in Washington, D.C., to know what's happening, you follow the money; in Greenland you follow the meltwater.
Glaciologists
became oceanographers when they realized, in 2008, the trigger effect
for galloping glaciers was warm
pulses of
subtropical waters that undermine glaciers at great depth in the sea,
at the grounding lines where this warm water can invade.
Indeed,
ocean warming is arguably the climate
change story. The planetary energy imbalance due to the enhanced
greenhouse effect is loading far
more heat into the oceans than
the atmosphere
or land.
The world is 70 percent ocean-covered after all. While there
were signs of
a warming hiatus in air temperatures from 1998 to 2012, the
ocean continued
to heat up,
an equivalent of four Hiroshima bombs, per second, all day, every
day. The increase is continuing as we load the atmosphere with CO2.
The
fundamental climate heating issue is a problem of too much of a good
thing. The natural greenhouse effect -- a good thing -- keeps
temperatures tolerable at night. But it has been enhanced by
more than a century of people externalizing the environmental costs
of stupendous economic growth, loading the atmosphere now with 42
percent more carbon dioxide, 240 percent more methane, 20 percent
more nitrous oxide, 42 percent more tropospheric ozone, etc. We have
far too much gaseous carbon compounds now in our atmosphere, people.
The carbon pollution is, by the way, making our
oceans too acidic, threatening the base of the marine food chain.
Would someone step forward and deny the changing ocean chemistry? Do
I digress?
We have far too much gaseous carbon compounds now in our atmosphere, people.
The
key question, as I see it, is how to project what the sea level will
soon be due to ice sheet melting. But this is confounded by us not
really knowing what to expect. We keep being surprised by nature
being more sensitive and complex. As the science develops, we see
more interconnection, where multiplying feedbacks produce
surprisingly fast responses.
Will
there be some saving self-regulation of human-induced climate warming
and its melting land ice consequences? The enormous increase of heat
in our oceans, from past decades of enhanced greenhouse effect,
negates any hope that negative feedbacks or even solar output will
prevent a much warmer world. The few negative feedbacks we have found
for ice -- like more
snow as
a result of a warming climate, more
reflective frost,
more efficient sub-glacial
water transmission --
are clearly being outdone. And at the global scale, despite some
negative feedbacks like more clouds, clearly we are not seeing net
cooling.
Feedbacks, whether positive or negative, only do their thing
after the initial effect. Negative feedbacks don't reverse the
perturbation.
Seemingly
the biggest issue with abrupt sea level rise comes from the
nowunstoppable
loss of
key sectors of west Antarctic ice and the discovery of more marine
instability than we thought elsewhere. Like glaciers thinning rapidly
in east
Antarctica.
Or in Greenland where improved bedrock maps reveal a
marine connection an average of 40 kilometers further inland than
previously thought. Or like how new fjord underwater
mapping reveals greater
fjord depths, increasing the odds that deep warm ocean water can
communicate with more Greenland glaciers than previously thought.
Surprise, surprise, surprise.
I'd say we are in for more surprises.
If
the past decade of scientific inquiry is any indication, I'd say we
are in for more surprises. That notion is further supported by the
fact that climate models used to project future temperatures lack key
processes that likely reinforce warming or the effects of warming,
not regulate it.
Despite
decades of progress by many clever scientists engaged with climate
modeling, climate models used to inform policymakers don't yet encode
key pieces of physics that have ice melting so fast. They don't
incorporate thermal
collapse --
ice softening due to increasing meltwater infiltration.
Climate
models also don't yet incorporate increasing forced ocean convection
at the ocean fronts of glaciers that forces a heat exchange between
warming water and ice at the grounding lines.
Climate
models don't yet prescribe background dark bare ice from outcropping
dust on Greenland from the dusty last ice age.
Climate
models don't include increasing wildfire delivering more
light-trapping dark particles to bright snow covered areas, yielding
earlier melt onset and more
intense summer melting.
As
a result of some of these factors and probably some as yet unknown
others, climate models have under-predicted the loss rate of snow
on land by
a factor of four and theloss
of sea ice by
a factor of two.
Climate
models also don't yet sufficiently resolve extended periods of lazy
north-south extended jet streams that produce the kind of sunny
summers over Greenland (2007-2012 and 2015) that resulted in melting
that our models didn't foresee happening until 2100.
While
individual climate models come close to observations on this or that
piece of the complex big picture, what ends up in global assessment
reports intended to help guide policy decisions and national
discussions of climate change are very conservative averages of
dozens of models that don't include the latest, higher sensitivity
physics.
So,
alas, when it comes to ice, how fast it can go and how fast the sea
will rise, if I were a betting man, I'd put my money on it going
faster than forecast.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.