4.6 Article

On the attribution of industrial-era glacier mass loss to anthropogenic climate change

Journal

CRYOSPHERE
Volume 15, Issue 4, Pages 1889-1905

Publisher

COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
DOI: 10.5194/tc-15-1889-2021

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Small ice caps and glaciers around the world have been losing mass and retreating since the industrial era, with anthropogenic factors playing a significant role. Recent studies indicate that the combined effects of natural climate change over the past millennium and anthropogenic climate change in the industrial era have contributed to this phenomenon.
Around the world, small ice caps and glaciers have been losing mass and retreating since the start of the industrial era. Estimates are that this has contributed approximately 30% of the observed sea-level rise over the same period. It is important to understand the relative importance of natural and anthropogenic components of this mass loss. One recent study concluded that the best estimate of the magnitude of the anthropogenic mass loss over the industrial era was only 25% of the total, implying a predominantly natural cause. Here we show that the anthropogenic fraction of the total mass loss of a given glacier depends only on the magnitudes and rates of the natural and anthropogenic components of climate change and on the glacier's response time. We consider climate change over the past millennium using synthetic scenarios, palaeoclimate reconstructions, numerical climate simulations, and instrumental observations. We use these climate histories to drive a glacier model that can represent a wide range of glacier response times, and we evaluate the magnitude of the anthropogenic mass loss relative to the observed mass loss. The slow cooling over the preceding millennium followed by the rapid anthropogenic warming of the industrial era means that, over the full range of response times for small ice caps and glaciers, the central estimate of the magnitude of the anthropogenic mass loss is essentially 100% of the observed mass loss. The anthropogenic magnitude may exceed 100% in the event that, without anthropogenic climate forcing, glaciers would otherwise have been gaining mass. Our results bring assessments of the attribution of glacier mass loss into alignment with assessments of others aspects of climate change, such as global-mean temperature. Furthermore, these results reinforce the scientific and public understanding of centennial-scale glacier retreat as an unambiguous consequence of human activity.

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