Categories: Kryosfärkapslar

The Importance of 1.5°C for Global Economies due to Cryosphere and Other Impacts

Environmental Research Letters, 2 May 2023

This study summarizes the long-term risks and consequences associated with overshooting the 1.5°C limit of the Paris Agreement, focusing on the global impacts of rising temperatures on ice sheets, permafrost, wildfires, heatwaves, ocean acidification and more. One of their key findings: even temporarily exceeding 1.5°C will result in 10% higher global sea level rise by 2100, and this would continue increasing for centuries. Only the very low emissions scenario avoids a multi-century acceleration of sea-level rise from the Antarctic and Greenland ice sheets. Even seemingly small changes to sea level rise can make a substantial difference, especially in terms of economic damage to infrastructure in vulnerable coastal and low-lying regions.

The study also makes clear that the impacts of overshoot are not equal in geographic, economic or intergenerational terms. Heatwave exposure is already higher in lower-middle income countries than in high-income countries. In addition, researchers found that today’s newborns will experience up to 25% more heatwaves across their lifetime if temperatures overshoot by 0.35°C before returning to 1.5°C; this is more than six times higher than the amount of heatwaves experienced by those who are aged 60 today. The study underscores that these far-reaching impacts of cryosphere loss will have cascading effects on health, infrastructure, agriculture, education and a wide range of other socioeconomic variables; the best way to reduce these impacts is to urgently reduce emissions and avoid overshoot.

https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1748-9326/accd83

Pam Pearson

Recent Posts

Lakes at the Edge of the Greenland Ice Sheet Increase Ice Loss, Sea-level Rise

Nature Communications, 1 April 2026 A growing network of meltwater lakes along the edge of…

2 veckor ago

Arctic River Rusting Driven by Iron Release from Permafrost Thaw

Nature Communications, 6 April 2026 Arctic warming increases the amount of iron draining out of…

2 veckor ago

Northern Arctic Vegetation Takes Decades to Recover Following Abrupt Permafrost Thaw

Nature Climate Change, 30 March 2026 Rising temperatures increase the frequency of retrogressive thaw slumps…

2 veckor ago

Only Low Emissions Scenarios Slow Growth in Antarctic Surface Melt

Nature Communications, 30 March 2026 Surface melting in Antarctica is projected to increase this century,…

2 veckor ago

COP30 Video of the Week: Monitoring Global Permafrost Thaw and Climate Feedbacks

Permafrost is a critical component of the global climate system because its thaw releases vast…

2 veckor ago

Shutdown of AMOC Could Release Ocean Carbon, Increasing Global Warming

Communications Earth & Environment, 27 March 2026 The potential collapse of the major system of…

2 veckor ago