4.8 Article

The Paris Climate Agreement and future sea-level rise from Antarctica

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NATURE
卷 593, 期 7857, 页码 83-+

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-03427-0

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The study reveals that a 3-degree C increase in global warming could lead to rapid Antarctic ice loss, contributing to a sea-level rise of around 0.5 cm per year by 2100. Strict measures are needed to limit temperature increase and slow down the pace of sea-level rise.
An observationally calibrated ice sheet-shelf model suggests that global warming of 3 degrees C will trigger rapid Antarctic ice loss, contributing about 0.5 cm per year of sea-level rise by 2100. The Paris Agreement aims to limit global mean warming in the twenty-first century to less than 2 degrees Celsius above preindustrial levels, and to promote further efforts to limit warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius(1). The amount of greenhouse gas emissions in coming decades will be consequential for global mean sea level (GMSL) on century and longer timescales through a combination of ocean thermal expansion and loss of land ice(2). The Antarctic Ice Sheet (AIS) is Earth's largest land ice reservoir (equivalent to 57.9 metres of GMSL)(3), and its ice loss is accelerating(4). Extensive regions of the AIS are grounded below sea level and susceptible to dynamical instabilities(5-8) that are capable of producing very rapid retreat(8). Yet the potential for the implementation of the Paris Agreement temperature targets to slow or stop the onset of these instabilities has not been directly tested with physics-based models. Here we use an observationally calibrated ice sheet-shelf model to show that with global warming limited to 2 degrees Celsius or less, Antarctic ice loss will continue at a pace similar to today's throughout the twenty-first century. However, scenarios more consistent with current policies (allowing 3 degrees Celsius of warming) give an abrupt jump in the pace of Antarctic ice loss after around 2060, contributing about 0.5 centimetres GMSL rise per year by 2100-an order of magnitude faster than today(4). More fossil-fuel-intensive scenarios(9) result in even greater acceleration. Ice-sheet retreat initiated by the thinning and loss of buttressing ice shelves continues for centuries, regardless of bedrock and sea-level feedback mechanisms(10-12) or geoengineered carbon dioxide reduction. These results demonstrate the possibility that rapid and unstoppable sea-level rise from Antarctica will be triggered if Paris Agreement targets are exceeded.

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