Arctic Thaw May be at "Tipping Point"
NORWAY: October 2, 2007
OSLO - A record melt of Arctic summer sea ice this month may be a sign that
global warming is reaching a critical trigger point that could accelerate
the northern thaw, some scientists say.
"The reason so much (of the Arctic ice) went suddenly is that it is hitting
a tipping point that we have been warning about for the past few years,"
James Hansen, director of NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies, told
Reuters.
The Arctic summer sea ice shrank by more than 20 percent below the previous
2005 record low in mid-September to 4.13 million sq km (1.6 million sq
miles), according to a 30-year satellite record. It has now frozen out to
4.2 million sq km.
The idea of climate tipping points -- like a see-saw that suddenly flips
over when enough weight gets onto one side -- is controversial because it is
little understood and dismissed by some as scaremongering about runaway
effects.
The polar thaw may herald a self-sustaining acceleration that could threaten
indigenous peoples and creatures such as polar bears -- as Arctic sea ice
shrinks, the darker ocean soaks up ever more heat than reflective snow and
ice.
In Germany, the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research says Arctic
sea ice has "already tipped".
Among potential "tipping elements" that are still stable, it lists on its
Web site a melt of Siberian permafrost, a slowdown of the Gulf Stream and
disruptions to the Indian monsoon.
"I'd say we are reaching a tipping point or are past it for the ice. This is
a strong indication that there is an amplifying mechanism here," said Paal
Prestrud of the Center for International Climate and Environmental Research
in Oslo.
"But that's more or less speculation. There isn't scientific documentation
other than the observations," he said.
SHIPPING, POLAR BEARS
Many experts now reckon Arctic ice may disappear in summer before
mid-century, decades before earlier forecasts. The thaw would open the
region to oil and gas exploration or shipping.
Reuters will host a summit of leading newsmakers on Oct 1-3 to review the
state of the environment. Speakers will include Rajendra Pachauri, the head
of the U.N. Climate Panel and Michael Morris, chief executive of American
Electric Power.
"All models seem to underestimate the speed at which the ice is melting,"
said Anders Levermann, a Potsdam professor.
"I do not believe that this is alarmist... not all tipping points are
irreversible," he said. And societies can weigh up remote risks, such as
planes crashing or nuclear meltdowns.
Hansen said he is seeking more study of causes of the melt, widely blamed on
greenhouse gases from burning fossil fuels but perhaps slightly stoked by
soot from forest fires or industries in Russia and China. Ice darkened by
soot melts faster.
"It is a very good lesson, because the ice sheets (on Greenland and
Antarctica) have their own tipping points, somewhat harder to get started
but far more dangerous for humanity around the globe," he said.
A melt of floating Arctic sea ice does not affect sea levels but Greenland
has enough ice to raise oceans by 7 metres and Antarctica by about 57 metres,
according to U.N. estimates.
Pachauri's authoritative climate panel, in a summary report due for release
in November, does not use the phrase "tipping point" but does say: "Climate
change could lead to abrupt or irreversible climate changes and impacts."
It says, for instance, that it is "very unlikely" that the Gulf Stream
bringing warm water north to Europe will switch off this century. That could
bring a big regional cooling.
And it says that a melt of ice sheets could lead to big sea level rises over
thousands of years. "Rapid sea level rise on century time scales cannot be
excluded," it adds.
Story by Alister Doyle, Environment Correspondent
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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