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Saturday, April 10, 2010

Stefan Rahmstorf: A new view on sea level rise

Nature Reports Climate Change, published online 6 April 2010; doi: 10.1038/climate.2010.29

A new view on sea level rise

by Stefan Rahmstorf

Has the IPCC underestimated the risk of sea level rise?
A new view on sea level rise
Recent studies predict that sea level could rise by more than one metre this century if greenhouse gas emissions continue to escalate. STEFAN RAHMSTORF
In its 2007 report1, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) projected a global sea level rise of 18 to 59 centimetres from 1990 to the 2090s, plus an unspecified amount that could come from changes in the large ice sheets covering Greenland and Antarctica.

But the physical climate models used by the IPCC have some limitations, prompting the search for alternative approaches to estimating sea level rise. New semi-empirical approaches are based on the idea that the rate of sea level rise is proportional to the amount of global warming — the warmer it gets, the faster ice melts — and they use past sea level and temperature data to quantify this effect.

Over the course of the twentieth century, the rate of sea level rise has roughly tripled in response to 0.8 °C global warming2. Since the beginning of satellite measurements, sea level has risen about 80% faster, at 3.4 mm per year3, than the average IPCC model projection of 1.9 mm per year. The difference between the semi-empirical estimates and the model-based estimates of the IPCC can be attributed largely to the response of continental ice to greenhouse warming. The IPCC range assumes a near-zero net contribution of the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets to future sea level rise, on the basis that Antarctica is expected to gain mass from an increase in snowfall. Observations show, however, that both ice sheets have been losing mass at an accelerating rate over the past two decades4.

A number of recent studies taking the semi-empirical approach have predicted much higher sea level rise for the 21st century than the IPCC, exceeding one metre if greenhouse gas emissions continue to escalate (Fig. 1). These new results have found wide recognition in the scientific community, as recent broad-based assessments show5, 6, 7. The question is: how plausible are the new estimates?

Figure 1: Range of rises.

Figure 1 : Range of rises. Unfortunately we are unable to provide accessible alternative text for this. If you require assistance to access this image, or to obtain a text description, please contact npg@nature.comEstimates for twenty-first century sea level rise from semi-empirical models2, 8, 16, 17, 18 as compared to the IPCC Fourth Assessment Report (AR4)1. For exact definitions of the time periods and emissions scenarios considered, see the original references. Full figure and legend (13 KB)

Although the popular media tend to focus on the upper limits of these projections, reaching the upper limits is, by definition, extremely unlikely. And at the high temperatures that produce extreme rises in sea level, predicting the response of the climate system is difficult. Upper limits also depend on how uncertainties are treated. Comparing the central estimates of sea level rise projections is therefore more informative. For a moderately pessimistic emissions scenario, named A1B, which results in about 3 °C global warming above the 1990 level by the 2090s, the IPCC projects 35 cm of sea level rise. This, rather implausibly, assumes no acceleration beyond the rate of sea level rise observed during the past 15 years, despite temperatures increasing by four times as much as in the twentieth century. A recent study by Martin Vermeer and me8, in contrast, yields a central estimate of 124 cm by 2100 and 114 cm by 2095.

All the ice

Semi-empirical models have the merit that they reproduce past sea level rise very well, unlike the physical models used thus far. But they too have a serious limitation: there is no way to ensure that the historic relationship between sea level rise and temperature will continue to hold in future.

So how can we critically assess the robustness of the empirical relationship? Global warming raises sea level through two processes: thermal expansion of the ocean, and the addition of water to the ocean from melting land ice. For thermal expansion, researchers have tested the semi-empirical methods against complex ocean–atmosphere models and found that the sea level response of these vastly more complex physical models is reproduced well8. If the physical models do a good job on thermal expansion, then so will suitable semi-empirical models.

Whether the response of continental ice to warming is well represented by empirical models is harder to judge, though the linear dependence on temperature is similar to that also used in glacier modelling studies and by the IPCC. The semi-empirical approach, however, was recently criticized in the popular media9 on the grounds that it is, to a large extent, calibrated to the past glacier contribution, and that glaciers would be “largely gone by 2050.” Apart from this being just not so, the melting of all glaciers would add 60 cm to global sea level10, a lot more than in the worst-case scenario projected by semi-empirical models for 2050. And that contribution would be in addition to seawater expansion and melting of continental ice sheets.

Perhaps a more important argument is that the semi-empirical method does not treat mountain glaciers separately from ice sheets, but considers all ice as a continuum. The melting rate of an ice surface depends on the local climate, not on whether this ice surface is part of a small mountain glacier or a big ice sheet. The climatic conditions under which glaciers and ice sheets exist overlap. So, for example, the total ice surface found currently in regions with an annual mean air temperature of −12 °C consists of almost equal shares of ice from glaciers and ice sheets. In warmer regions the share from glaciers is larger, and in colder regions the share from ice sheets is larger. At −12 °C annual mean temperature, the ice is already affected by melting during some days of the year. As the global climate warms, some of the glacier ice will vanish, but this will be compensated for as ice at colder temperatures — including that from ice sheets — becomes subject to melting. The linear relationship in the semi-empirical formulae therefore will not fail anytime soon because we are running out of ice to melt.

But this view considers only surface mass balance, without taking account of the kind of rapid, nonlinear ice-flow changes that some glaciologists expect for the future. The semi-empirical approach has been criticized for not accounting for such changes; if they indeed lie in wait, this approach will, if anything, underestimate future sea level rise.

Melt math

Of the IPCC's central estimate for the A1B scenario of 35 cm of sea level rise by the 2090s, most — some 23 cm — is expected to result from thermal expansion of the ocean. If this is correct, we can subtract those 23 cm from our sea level rise estimate of 114 cm to give 91 cm, or 80% of the total rise, that would need to come from land ice melting. Such a scenario is hardly inconceivable, given that land ice has, in fact, contributed 80% of the observed sea level rise over the past five years11.

If two-thirds of glacier ice were lost, this would add 40 cm to the global sea level, which is close to the lower bound of 37 cm recently estimated by glacier experts12. In that case, the percentage contribution of glacier melting to sea level rise would remain the same as in past decades13. The big ice sheets would then need to contribute only about 50 cm — corresponding to less than 1% of their mass — to bring sea level rise up to 114 cm. None of this appears any less plausible than the IPCC's assumptions.

At the end of the last ice age, the Earth slowly warmed by 4–7 °C globally14 and lost almost two-thirds of its land ice in the process. That raised sea level by 120 metres, at rates often exceeding a metre per century1. It seems that nothing in the present ice-sheet configuration would rule out similar rates in future15. How much of the remaining 65 metres' worth of land ice will humans melt if we warm the planet by a further several degrees?

Stefan Rahmstorf is Professor of Physics of the Oceans at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research in Potsdam, Germany.  e-mail: stefan@pik-potsdam.de

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