Nature, September 23
The rate and scale of ice loss from Antarctica will increase as temperatures exceed 2°C, according to new modeling from the Potsdam Institute. At global warming up to 2°C above pre-industrial, Antarctica would lose enough ice mass to increase global sea-levels by 1.3 m per each degree of warming. From 2°C to 6°C however, loss rises to 2.4 m per each degree of warming; and from 6 to 9°C, by 10 m for each degree, if these temperature levels are sustained over time. Restoration of Antarctica’s ice sheet would require a return to temperatures at or below-pre-industrial. This study shows the strong sensitivity of the Antarctic Ice Sheet to critical temperature thresholds beyond which amplifying mechanisms are triggered, dramatically accelerating mass loss. The authors conclude that by not meeting the Paris Agreement, more than one such critical threshold might be crossed, committing us to ever-higher long-term sea-level rise.
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-020-2727-5
Compiled by Amy Imdieke
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, 23 April 2026 Observations suggest we are currently tracking…
NPJ Natural Hazards, 16 April 2026) Rising temperatures and shifting regional precipitation patterns are reducing…
Nature Communications, 18 March 2026 This study identified a marked increase in both flood frequency…
The Cryosphere, 7 April 2026 Projections of Antarctica’s response to temporary but extreme ocean warming…
The Cryosphere, 1 April 2026 Antarctic sea ice stayed fairly steady from 2010-2014, but began…
Changes in Antarctica can trigger fast and cascading impacts, often with global consequences. Multiple abrupt…