Poster's note : title piece is a box extract, immediately below. Main
article posted beneath, which is well worth reading for those not up to
speed with the sea level rise issue.

https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg22630253-300-latest-numbers-show-at-least-5-metres-sea-level-rise-locked-in/#bx302533B1

Can geoengineering save coastal cities?

It’s already too late to prevent massive sea level rise (see main story).
Or is it? Can geoengineering stop low-lying cities sinking beneath the
waves?

It certainly won’t be easy. “Once you kick in the melting feedbacks, it’s
very hard to shut them off,” says Alexander Robinson of the Complutense
University of Madrid. To have any chance, we have to get the planet’s
temperature back down to pre-industrial levels in the not too distant
future. “I personally see that as quite unlikely,” Robinson says.

One key problem is that most geoengineering methods, such as pumping
sulphates into the atmosphere, rely on reflecting sunlight and would cool
the tropics more than the poles (Geophysical Research Letters, doi.org/453).
Cooling the poles enough to halt ice loss would devastate the rest of the
world, slashing rainfall, for instance.

The best solution would be to suck all the excess carbon dioxide from the
atmosphere, but the immense scale of the task and the speed required make
this seem nigh on impossible. Other suggestions, such as building huge
barriers between warming waters and glaciers, don’t look feasible either.

Another major problem is that until cities start drowning, it is hard to
see politicians spending trillions on megaprojects. And once they begin to
drown, it will already be too late to prevent major sea level rise.

(main article follows)

SPECIAL REPORT  10 June 2015
Latest numbers show at least 5 metres sea-level rise locked in

It’s too late to stop the seas rising at least 5 metres and only fast,
drastic action will avert a 20-metre rise, New Scientist calculates based
on recent studies

WHATEVER we do now, the seas will rise at least 5 metres. Most of Florida
and many other low-lying areas and cities around the world are doomed to go
under. If that weren’t bad enough, without drastic cuts in global
greenhouse gas emissions – more drastic than any being discussed ahead of
the critical climate meeting in Paris later this year – a rise of over 20
metres will soon be unavoidable.

After speaking to the researchers behind a series of recent studies, New
Scientist has made the first calculations of what their findings mean for
how much sea level rise is already unavoidable, or soon will be.

Much uncertainty still surrounds the pace of future rises, with estimates
for a 5-metre rise ranging from a couple of centuries – possibly even less
– to a couple of millennia. But there is hardly any doubt that this rise is
inevitable.

We already know that we are heading for a rise of at least 1 metre by 2100.
The sea will then continue to climb for many centuries as the planet warms.
The question is, just how high will it get?

No return
According to the latest report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change (IPCC), over the next 2000 years we can expect a rise of about 2.3
metres for each sustained 1 °C increase in the global temperature. This
means a 5-metre rise could happen only if the world remains at least 2 °C
warmer than in pre-industrial times up to the year 4100. That doesn’t sound
so bad: it suggests that if we found some way of cooling the planet, we
could avoid that calamity.

Unfortunately, the report, published in 2013, is not the whole story. Last
year, two teams reported that two massive glaciers in West Antarctica have
already passed the point of no return.

Ian Joughin of the University of Washington, Seattle, modelled the fate of
one of the glaciers. “No matter what, the glacier continued to lose mass,”
he says.

The loss of those two glaciers alone will raise sea level 1.2 metres. If
they go, Joughin says, it’s hard to see the rest of the West Antarctic
surviving.

Others agree. “I think these are very convincing studies,” says Anders
Levermann of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research in Germany,
one of the authors of the sea level chapter in the last IPCC report. “The
West Antarctic ice sheet is gone.”

The reason is that the West Antarctic ice sheet sits in a massive basin,
its base as much as 2 kilometres below sea level. At the moment, only a
little ice on the edges is exposed to the warming waters around Antarctica.
As the ice retreats, however, ever-deeper parts of the basin will be
exposed to warming waters, leading to ever more of it being lost. The
process is irreversible because once it starts, it will continue as long as
warm conditions persist. This means a 3.3-metre rise is now unavoidable.

And that’s not all (see chart). Even in the unlikely event we manage to
limit warming to 2 °C, we’re in for a 0.8-metre rise as the oceans warm and
expand. Mountain glaciers around the world will contribute 0.4 metres.
Adding those figures to the 3.3 metres, we get 4.5 metres in total, or 5
metres rounded up. That’s conservative, given that it doesn’t count any
melting from East Antarctica or Greenland.

Latest numbers show at least 5 metres sea-level rise locked in
Most of the ice in East Antarctica is more stable than that in West
Antarctica as it rests on land above sea level. There are two large basins,
the Aurora and the Wilkes, whose floors are below sea level, but these are
shallower than the West Antarctic one. We had thought only massive warming
would destabilise the ice here.

Trough threat
However, Totten, the main glacier that drains the Aurora basin, is
thinning, says Jamin Greenbaum of the University of Texas at Austin. His
team reported in March that radar sounding has revealed a trough under the
ice that could let warm water enter the basin and trigger enough melting to
eventually raise sea level by 5.1 metres (Nature Geoscience, doi.org/27w).
“The mind-blowing thing is that there is as much ice in one glacier in East
Antarctica as in all of West Antarctica,” says Greenbaum.

The situation is similar in the Wilkes basin. It’s not losing ice yet, but
once a small amount on the margins is lost it will continue disintegrating
until enough ice has melted to raise sea level 3.5 metres, Levermann’s team
reported last year (Nature Climate Change, doi.org/snz).

What will it take to kick-start the loss of all this ice? Not much. During
the Pliocene period around 4 million years ago, for instance, when the
planet was 2 or 3 °C warmer at times, sea level was over 20 metres higher
than now. Researchers suspect that much of this came from the Aurora and
Wilkes basins.

Support for this idea comes from an improved ice sheet model that, for the
first time, includes dynamic processes such as cliff collapse resulting
from ice sheets being undercut by warming waters. In January, a team
including Richard Alley of Pennsylvania State University reported that
Pliocene conditions will lead, so the model indicates, to ice loss not only
in Aurora and Wilkes but also in several smaller East Antarctic basins.
Together, they hold enough ice to add at least 15 metres to global sea
level (Earth and Planetary Science Letters, doi.org/42m).

We are currently on course for a world even warmer than the Pliocene, which
means we could soon trigger the loss of the Wilkes and Aurora ice – if we
haven’t already.

Latest numbers show at least 5 metres sea-level rise locked in
This break-up will be traumatic (Image: NASA)

Then there’s Greenland. The ice here mostly rests on land above sea level,
so should take thousands of years to melt. You might think, then, that
there is plenty of time left to save it. Not so, says Alexander Robinson of
the Complutense University of Madrid, Spain.

He says his team’s studies show that we are already nearing the point of no
return for Greenland (Nature Climate Change, doi.org/kkw). “Within the next
50 years, we could be committing ourselves to continuous sea level rise
from Greenland over the next thousands of years,” he says. “That’s a very
profound thing to think about.”

The reason is that as warming continues, various positive feedbacks will
kick in. As the surface of the ice sheet lowers, for instance, it
experiences higher temperatures. In theory, the melting could still be
stopped if temperatures fall, but because carbon dioxide persists in the
atmosphere for many centuries, says Robinson, it is hard to see how that
could happen (see “Can geoengineering save coastal cities?“).

The loss of Greenland’s ice would add at least 6 metres to global sea
level. And in this business-as-usual scenario, ocean warming would
contribute 1.6 metres or more. Adding all this up leads to the frightening
conclusion that we don’t have much time left before we’re on a one-way
street to a world with seas 20 metres higher. “It’s kind of scary,” says
Robinson.

It will take thousands of years for the seas to rise to this extent, but
much of the rise could happen early on – within the first few centuries –
although no one can say for sure. Joughin thinks the IPCC estimate of up to
1.2 metres by 2100 could still be in the right ball park. “It’s likely to
be on the high end [of the IPCC estimate] but not far outside.”

Yet in the improved ice model that Alley’s team ran, Antarctica alone added
5 metres to sea level in the first two centuries. That model was run with
warm Pliocene-like conditions from the start, not where we are at now.

It might not take too long to reach a similar point, though. We’re in
danger of soaring past Pliocene levels of warmth as early as the middle of
the century if we don’t slash emissions soon. In the study, the West
Antarctic ice sheet collapsed in mere decades in response to this kind of
warmth.

What’s more, the model might still leave out some melting processes, Alley
says. “It is possible that this rather short timescale is not the worst
possible case.”

This article appeared in print under the headline “Five metres and counting”

By Michael Le PageMagazine issue 3025 published 13 June 2015

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