Ice loss sparks new climate change fears
by Fiona Harvey in Bonn, The Financial Times, April 10, 2009
Evidence of ice loss from both poles this week has sparked fresh fears that global warming is progressing faster than scientists had predicted.
Arctic ice has thinned dramatically, as well as shrinking in area, according to US research. Thin seasonal ice, which melts and refreezes each year, now makes up about 70% of the Arctic winter ice, up from about 40–50% in the 1980s and 1990s, leaving far less of the older, thicker ice that is harder to melt.
In the Antarctic, an ice bridge connecting an island to the Wilkins ice shelf – a sheet of ice about the size of Northern Ireland – shattered as scientists monitored it through satellite observations.
“What we’re seeing is very dramatic,” said Andrew Fleming, remote sensing manager at the British Antarctic Survey. “It’s very worrying.”
Scientists believed the effects were linked to the “very strong warming” at the poles, he said. The Antarctic peninsula has warmed by more than 3 ºC in the past 50 years. “That’s a staggering rate of warming, and it’s still going up,” said Mr Fleming.
Ice shelves take centuries to form, but when they start to break up it can be sudden. The bridge at the Wilkins ice shelf was a 40-km strand of ice, at its narrowest point a few hundred metres wide, connecting the shelf to Charcot and Latady islands.
KEY FACTS AND QUOTES:
3 °C Amount Antarctic peninsula has warmed in 50 years
7 metres Amount sea level will rise if Greenland’s ice sheet melts
70 metres Rise if both east and west Antarctic ice sheets melt
‘What we’re seeing is very dramatic. It’s very worrying’ Andrew Fleming, British Antarctic Survey
‘We have no time to lose in tackling this crisis’ Hillary Clinton, U.S. Secretary of State
Last year, scientists from the BAS landed on it in an aircraft to examine the ice. They had known for some time it was under strain, but it remained intact until at the end of last week satellite images showed new cracks appearing.
The next day, the ice sheet had “exploded from the centre outwards,” said Mr Fleming, who was monitoring the break-up through satellite images from the European Space Agency.
“It was very fast, very dramatic,” he said. “It’s now completely shattered.”
The break-up of the ice bridge alarms scientists because it could accelerate the break-up of the rest of the Wilkins shelf. This was at least the 10th shelf to start disintegrating quickly in recent years, said Mr Fleming, and several more were in danger.
Rapid melting of polar sea ice is of particular concern for two reasons: disappearing ice leaves areas of open sea that are dark, and – unlike the reflective ice – absorb the sun’s heat, accelerating the warming process; the break-up of ice shelves exposes glaciers that then begin to move faster to the sea.
The Arctic and some of the Antarctic float on the sea. Ice takes up more space than water, and when this floating ice melts, it does not directly raise sea levels, in the same way that the melting of ice cubes in a full glass of water would not cause the glass to overflow.
However, the glaciers of the Antarctic peninsula are on land, so when they tumble into the sea, they contribute directly to rising sea levels. In the north, the Greenland ice sheet is also on land, and its glaciers are flowing faster to the sea.
If Greenland’s ice sheet melted, it would raise sea levels by seven metres, and if both the east and west Antarctic ice sheets went, the figure would be 10 times higher. That would take hundreds of years, according to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
Long before the land ice disappeared, however, sea levels would rise significantly – a 1% loss of the Antarctic land ice would probably raise levels by 65cm, estimates the Norwegian Polar Institute.
Two conferences this week were addressing the problems of the poles and climate change. At a joint meeting of the Antarctic Treaty and the Arctic Council in the U.S., Hillary Clinton, U.S. Secretary of State, said the news of the Wilkins ice shelf showed “global warming has already had enormous effects on our planet, and we have no time to lose in tackling this crisis.”
In Bonn, governments met for the first meeting to thrash out the details of a successor to the Kyoto protocol on climate change.
One factor that could help to slow the melting of the Arctic, but which has not yet received serious consideration internationally, would be to cut the amount of “black carbon” – soot – that we spew into the air. Black carbon darkens ice when it falls, causing it to absorb more heat, and may be responsible for half of the warming effect in the Arctic, according to research. Cutting soot would not only remove large amounts of air pollution, but, say some scientists, could be quicker and easier than cutting carbon dioxide emissions.
Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2009
Link to article (sign up for 10 free article per 30 days): http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/0e50907e-25ec-11de-be57-00144feabdc0.html
Blog Archive
-
▼
2009
(1326)
-
▼
April
(72)
- Arnold Wolfendale -- "Natural causes" not responsi...
- Nature, 458, Climate crunch: A burden beyond bearing
- Stephen H. Schneider, Nature, 458, The worst-case ...
- Joseph Romm: As the major emitters convene, is Chi...
- Remarks of President Barack Obama, National Academ...
- Dorthe Dahl Jensen, Al Gore call for quick action ...
- H.D. Adams et al. PNAS Temperature sensitivity of ...
- J. Y. Wakano, M. A. Nowak & C. Hauert, PNAS: Spati...
- Angelika Humbert: Northern ice front of Wilkins Ic...
- European Space Agency Envisat and TerraSAR-X satel...
- European Space Agency: Wilkins Ice Shelf's norther...
- China Still Presses Crusade Against Falun Gong
- Joseph Romm on Nicholas Dawidoff, Freeman Dyson, M...
- NOAA: Annual and Monthly Tornado Statistics
- S. A. McAfee & J. L. Russell, GRL, 35, Northern An...
- Drier, warmer springs in U.S. Southwest stem from ...
- Catherine Brahic: Early springs show Siberia is w...
- NASA's THEMIS satellite: Giant plasma space tornad...
- NOAA: Greenhouse gases, CO2, methane, continue to ...
- Joseph Romm: NOAA stunner: 2008 methane levels ro...
- Dust storms escalate, prompting environmental fear...
- J Turner et al. GRL 36; Non‐annular atmospheric ci...
- D. J. Lunt, G. L. Foster, A. M. Haywood, E. J. Sto...
- Why is Greenland covered in ice? Changes in carbon...
- Kevin Trenberth, NCAR: Climate change threatens Ga...
- BBC: World's major rivers are 'drying up'
- Peter Ditlevsen: Critical turning point can trigge...
- C. L. Archer & K. Caldeira, GRL, 35 (2008), Histor...
- C. Archer & K. Caldeira: Jet streams are shifting ...
- D. M. Romps & Z. Kuang: Cyclones spurt water into ...
- Jon Gertner, NYT: Why isn't the brain green?
- Chinese cyberspies penetrate the Pentagon's Joint ...
- John Turner et al., By the end of the century we e...
- Jeff Masters: NSIDC reports multi-year ice lowest...
- Ivor van Heerden fired by LSU for criticizing Bush...
- Lack of permanent multi-year Arctic ice surprises ...
- "Our Moral Obligation" by Lise Van Susteren, Huffi...
- U.K. police preemptively arrest 114 climate-change...
- Australia's largest river, the Murray, is close to...
- P. Blanchon, A. Eisenhauer, J. Fietzke & V. Liebet...
- NYT: China is eating the planet: -- deals help Chi...
- Bryan Walsh, Time Magazine, The Dire Fate of Fores...
- Henry D. Adams et al., Temperature sensitivity of ...
- Kenneth M. Golden, Climate Change and the Mathemat...
- David Pollard & Robert M. DeConto, Nature, 458, Mo...
- R. DeConto, D. Pollard, D. Harwood, D. MacAyeal, C...
- The Financial Times: Ice loss at the South Pole an...
- Andrew Glikson's blog on climate change science an...
- Chinese and Russian cyber spies 'infiltrate U.S. p...
- Marco Tedesco describes research on Greenland in 2...
- Joseph Romm: Newsbusters lie to themselves about s...
- Chinese cyberspies penetrate U.S. electrical grid ...
- Hansen: Never said biochar a miracle cure - Monbio...
- Jinlun Zhang, J. Climate, 20 (2007), Increasing An...
- Where was the Wordie Ice Shelf?
- Arctic sea ice thinnest ever going into spring by ...
- NSIDC: Arctic sea ice younger, thinner as melt sea...
- NASA/JPL's Ron Kwok, NSIDC's Walter Meier, UC's Ch...
- Western Antarctica: Wordie Ice Shelf gone, Larsen...
- David Vaughan: Wilkins Ice Sheet cracks up on the ...
- Muyin Wang & James Overland: Ice-free Arctic Ocean...
- Muyin Wang & James E. Overland, GRL, 36 (2009), A ...
- West Antarctica Ice Sheet (WAIS) news from Europea...
- Andrew Revkin: Study -- Cool spells normal in war...
- J. Silverman et al., GRL, 36, Coral reefs may star...
- T. Naish et al., Nature, 458 (2009): Obliquity-pa...
- Olive Heffernan: No time to retreat (Mainstream me...
- Drew Shindell & Greg Faluvegi, Nature Geoscience, ...
- Drew Shindell & Greg Faluvegi: Black carbon respo...
- Amato T. Evan et al., The role of aerosols in the ...
- Amato Evan et al., Aerosol coverage causing more r...
- List of March 2009 postings to Climate Change: The...
-
▼
April
(72)
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment