New work from an international team including Carnegie's
Ken1 Caldeira demonstrates that the planet's remaining fossil fuel resources would be sufficient to melt nearly all of Antarctica if burned, leading to a 50- or 60-meter (160 to 200 foot) rise in sea level. Because so many major cities are at or near sea level, this would put many highly populated areas where more than a billion people live under water, including New York City and Washington, DC. It is published in Science Advances. "Our findings show that if we do not want to melt Antarctica, we can't keep taking fossil fuel carbon out of the ground and just dumping it into the atmosphere as CO2 like we've been doing," Caldeira said. "Most previous studies of Antarctic have focused on loss of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet. Our study demonstrates that burning coal, oil, and gas also risks loss of the much larger East Antarctic Ice Sheet."
Caldeira
initiated2 this project with lead author Ricarda Winkelmann while she was a Visiting
Investigator3 at the Carnegie Institution for Science. Winkelmann and co-author Anders Levermann are at the Postdam Institute for Climate Impact Research; co-author Andy Ridgwell is at the University of California Riverside.
Although Antarctica has already begun to lose ice, a complex array of factors will determine the ice sheet's future, including greenhouse gas-caused
atmospheric4 warming, additional oceanic warming
perpetuated5 by the atmospheric warming, and the possible
counteracting6 effects of additional snowfall.
"It is much easier to predict that an ice cube in a warming room is going to melt eventually than it is to say
precisely7 how quickly it will vanish," Winkelmann said, explaining all the contributing factors for which the team's models had to account.
The team used modeling to study the ice sheet's evolution over the next 10,000 years, because carbon persists in the atmosphere
millennia8 after it is released. They found that the West Antarctic ice sheet becomes
unstable9 if carbon
emissions10 continue at current levels for 60 to 80 years, representing only 6 to 8 percent of the 10,000 billion tons of carbon that could be released if we use all accessible fossil fuels.
"The West Antarctic ice sheet may already have tipped into a state of unstoppable ice loss, whether as a result of human activity or not. But if we want to pass on cities like Tokyo, Hong Kong, Shanghai, Calcutta, Hamburg and New York as our future heritage, we need to avoid a tipping in East Antarctica," Levermann said.