Antarctic Ice Riddle Keeps Sea-Level Secrets
ANTARTICA: February 1, 2008
TROLL STATION, Antarctica - A deep freeze holding 90 percent of the world's
ice, Antarctica is one of the biggest puzzles in debate on global warming
with risks that any thaw could raise sea levels faster than UN projections.
Even if a fraction melted, Antarctica could damage nations from Bangladesh
to Tuvalu in the Pacific and cities from Shanghai to New York. It has enough
ice to raise sea levels by 57 metres (187 ft) if it melted, over thousands
of years.
A year after the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)
projected sea level rises by 2100 of about 20 to 80 cms (8-32 inches), a
Reuters poll of 10 of the world's top climatologists showed none think that
range is alarmist.
Six experts stuck by the projections, saying the response of ice sheets in
Antarctica and Greenland was still unclear, and four other experts,
including one of the authors of the IPCC report, projected gains could be 1
or even 2 metres by 2100.
"Most people looking at it are thinking more in terms of a metre," said John
Moore of the Arctic Centre at the University of Lapland. "Insurance
companies don't know to a factor of 100 where to set their insurance
premiums for coastal areas in Florida."
Some island nations, such as the Maldives in the Indian Ocean, are building
defences costing millions of dollars and want to know how high to build.
"I think it will be...certainly at the high end of the range," said Kim
Holmen, research director of the Norwegian Polar Institute, at the Troll
Station 250 km (155 miles) from the coast in Antartica.
Set amid jagged mountains like the mythical homes of troll giants, this part
of east Antarctica is the world's deep freeze with no sign of a thaw.
Temperatures were about minus 15 Celsius (5.00F) at the height of the
Antarctic summer.
"It's my view that more than a metre of sea-level rise can't be ruled out,"
said Stefan Rahmstorf, of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research
in Germany. He said many experts "think the IPCC range is unfortunately not
the full story".
MORE ICE
Even so, most experts said it is still impossible to model how the ice will
react. Antarctica may accumulate more ice this century because of warming,
blamed by the IPCC mainly on human use of fossil fuels, rather than slide
faster into the sea.
"The crux of this problem is that we are moving into an era where we are
observing changes in the climate system that have never before been seen in
human history," said Gerald Meehl, of the US National Center for Atmospheric
Research.
"Ice sheets fall into that category. Quite simply, at this time we don't
have a good upper-range estimate of 'how much sea- level rise and how
fast'," he said. Meehl, a coordinating lead author of the IPCC report, said
that gave the best view.
The core prediction for sea-level rise by the IPCC, which shared the 2007
Nobel Peace Prize with former US Vice President Al Gore, is for a gain of 18
to 59 cms (7-23 inches) in the 21st century, after 17 cms in the 20th.
The forecast rate includes faster ice flow from Antarctica and Greenland
observed from 1993-2003 but the IPCC said this could increase or decrease in
future. If the flow grows in line with temperature rises, it would add a
further 10 to 20 cms.
"The IPCC range only takes into account things that can be modelled," said
Jonathan Gregory of the University of Reading, who was also among authors
who stuck by the conclusions.
"There are lots and lots of reasons why you can say there will be large
changes. But you can't say it without more evidence," he said.
Among worrying scenarios is the chance Antarctica will slide faster into the
sea, perhaps if a ring of sea ice melts away in warmer oceans. Or melt water
might flow under the ice sheets of Antarctica and Greenland, and act a
lubricant to speed a slide.
But glaciers can slow down as well as speed up.
"We don't know much about changes in the speed of outlet glaciers. Some of
these in Antarctica and Greenland tend to speed up -- or slow down. Nobody
knows," said Philippe Huybrechts at the Free University of Brussels.
Another factor that could dampen any rise is that warmer air can absorb more
moisture -- which may paradoxically bring more snow to Antarctica that would
thicken the ice sheet and contribute to lower sea levels this century.
Most of the projected sea-level rise by 2100 will be because water in the
oceans expands as it warms, with little being added by the ice sheets.
Beyond 2100, the IPCC said sea-level rises are likely to go on for
centuries.
"In the long term we are in trouble...Greenland is close to a 'tipping
point'," or an irreversible meltdown that would last hundreds of years,
Huybrechts said. Greenland has enough ice to raise world sea levels by 7
metres if it all vanished.
One IPCC author said the uncertainties are stacking up towards rising seas.
"I firmly believe sea-level estimates are conservative," said Andrew Weaver
of the University of Victoria, Canada.
"The lower bound should probably be more like 25 cm and the upper bound
closer to a metre if you take everything into consideration now," he said.
Moore at the University of Lapland said a so-far unpublished study by his
centre showed seas could rise by 1-2 metres by 2100, based on observational
records of sea level in the last 150 years.
-- For Reuters latest environment blogs click on: http://blogs.reuters.com/environment/
(Editing by Sara Ledwith)
Story by Alister Doyle, Environment Correspondent
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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