Arctic melting faster, could raise sea 5 feet by 2100

STOCKHOLM (AP) — Arctic ice is melting faster than expected and could raise the 
average global sea level by as much as five feet this century, an authoritative 
new report suggests.

The study by the international Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Program, or 
AMAP, is one of the most comprehensive updates on climate change in the Arctic, 
and builds on a similar assessment in 2005.

The full report will be delivered to foreign ministers of the eight Arctic 
nations next week, but an executive summary including the key findings was 
obtained by The Associated Press on Tuesday.

It says that Arctic temperatures in the past six years were the highest since 
measurements began in 1880, and that feedback mechanisms believed to accelerate 
warming in the climate system have now started kicking in.

One mechanism involves the ocean absorbing more heat when it's not covered by 
ice, which reflects the sun's energy. That effect has been anticipated by 
scientists "but clear evidence for it has only been observed in the Arctic in 
the past five years," AMAP said.

The report also shatters some of the forecasts made in 2007 by the U.N.'s 
expert panel on climate change.

The cover of sea ice on the Arctic 
Ocean<http://content.usatoday.com/topics/topic/Places,+Geography/Bodies+of+water/Arctic+Ocean>,
 for example, is shrinking faster than projected by the U.N. panel. The level 
of summer ice coverage has been at or near record lows every year since 2001, 
AMAP said, predicting that the Arctic Ocean will be nearly ice free in summer 
within 30-40 years.

Its assessment also said the U.N. panel was too conservative in estimating how 
much sea levels will rise — one of the most closely watched aspects of global 
warming because of the potentially catastrophic impact on coastal cities and 
island nations.

The melting of Arctic glaciers and ice caps, including Greenland's massive ice 
sheet, are projected to help raise global sea levels by 35 to 63 inches (90-160 
centimeters) by 2100, AMAP said, though it noted that the estimate was highly 
uncertain.

That's up from a 2007 projection of 7 to 23 inches (19-59 centimeters) by the 
U.N. panel, which didn't consider the dynamics of ice caps in the Arctic and 
Antarctica.

"The observed changes in sea ice on the Arctic Ocean, in the mass of the 
Greenland ice sheet and Arctic ice caps and glaciers over the past 10 years are 
dramatic and represent an obvious departure from the long-term patterns," AMAP 
said in the executive summary.

The organization's main function is to advise the nations surrounding the 
Arctic — the U.S., Canada, Russia, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Iceland and Finland 
— on threats to the Arctic environment.

The findings of its report — Snow, Water, Ice and Permafrost in the Arctic — 
will be discussed by some of the scientists who helped compile it at a 
conference starting Wednesday in the Danish capital, Copenhagen.

In the past few years, scientists have steadily improved ways of measuring the 
loss of ice into the oceans.

In research reported in March in the journal Geophysical Research 
Letters<http://content.usatoday.com/topics/topic/Geophysical+Research+Letters>, 
U.S. and European scientists used two independent methods to corroborate their 
findings: the on-the-ground measurement of ice thickness and movements using 
GPS stations and other tools, and the measurement of ice mass through gravity 
readings from satellites.

That team, led by Eric Rignot of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, projected 
that the accelerating melt of the vast Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets would 
itself raise sea levels by about 6 inches (15 centimeters) by 2050. Adding in 
other factors — expansion of the oceans from warming and runoff from other 
glaciers worldwide — would raise sea levels a total of some 13 inches (32 
centimeters) by 2050, they said.

They did not project sea levels to 2100 because of long-range uncertainties.

Currents, winds and other forces would make sea-level rise vary globally, but 
Bangladesh, Florida and other such low-lying areas and coastal cities worldwide 
would be hard hit.

The AMAP report said melting glaciers and ice sheets worldwide have become the 
biggest contributor to sea level rise. Greenland's ice sheet alone accounted 
for more than 40 percent of the 0.12 inches (3.1 millimeters) of sea-level rise 
observed annually between 2003 and 2008, AMAP said.

It said the yearly mass loss from Greenland's ice sheet, which covers an area 
the size of Mexico, increased from 50 gigatons in 1995-2000 to more than 200 
gigatons in 2004-2008.

Scientists are still debating how much of the changes observed in the Arctic 
are due to natural variances and how much to warming caused by the release of 
carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases. AMAP projected that average fall and 
winter temperatures in the Arctic will climb by 5.4-10.8 F (3-6 C) by 2080, 
even if greenhouse gas emissions are lower than in the past decade.

————

AP Special Correspondent Charles J. Hanley in New York contributed to this 
report.




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