As the earth warms, the melting of the
earth’s two massive ice sheets—Antarctica and Greenland—could raise sea
level enormously. If the Greenland ice sheet were to melt, it would
raise sea level 7 meters (23 feet). Melting of the West Antarctic Ice
Sheet would raise sea level 5 meters (16 feet). But even just partial
melting of these ice sheets will have a dramatic effect on sea level
rise. Senior scientists are noting that the Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change (IPCC) projections of sea level rise during this century
of 18 to 59 centimeters are already obsolete and that a rise of 2
meters during this time is within range.
As I note in Plan B 3.0: Mobilizing to Save Civilization, assessing
the prospects for the Greenland ice sheet begins with looking at the
warming of the Arctic region. A 2005 study, conducted by the Arctic
Climate Impact Assessment (ACIA) team, an international group of 300
scientists, concluded that the Arctic is warming almost twice as fast
as the rest of the planet. It found that in the regions surrounding the
Arctic, including Alaska, western Canada, and eastern Russia, winter
temperatures have already climbed by 3-4 degrees Celsius (4–7 degrees
Fahrenheit) over the last half-century.
In
testimony before the U.S. Senate Commerce Committee, Sheila
Watt-Cloutier, an Inuit speaking on behalf of the 155,000 Inuits who
live in Alaska, Canada, Greenland, and the Russian Federation,
described their struggle to survive in the fast-changing Arctic climate
as “a snapshot of what is happening to the planet.” She called the
warming of the Arctic “a defining event in the history of this planet.”
The ACIA report described how the retreat of the sea
ice has devastating consequences for polar bears, whose very survival
may be at stake. A subsequent report indicated that polar bears,
struggling to survive, are turning to cannibalism. Also threatened are
ice-dwelling seals, a basic food source for the Inuit.
Since this 2005 report, there is new evidence that the problem is worse
than previously thought. A team of scientists from the National Snow
and Ice Data Center and the National Center for Atmospheric Research
concluded that the ice is melting much faster than climate models had
predicted. They found that from 1979 to 2006 the summer sea ice
shrinkage accelerated to 9.1 percent a decade. In 2007, Arctic sea ice
shrank some 20 percent below the previous record set in 2005. This
suggests that the sea could be ice-free well before 2050, the earliest
date projected by the IPCC in its 2007 report. Some scientists now
think that the Arctic Ocean could be ice-free in the summer by 2030, if
not earlier. Arctic scientist Julienne Stroeve observed that shrinking
Arctic sea ice may have reached “a tipping point that could trigger a
cascade of climate change reaching into Earth’s temperate regions.”
Scientists are concerned that “positive feedback loops” may be starting
to kick in. This term refers to a situation where a trend already under
way begins to reinforce itself. Two of these potential feedback
mechanisms are of particular concern to scientists. The first, in the
Arctic, is the albedo effect. When incoming sunlight strikes the ice in
the Arctic Ocean, up to 70 percent of it is reflected back into space.
Only 30 percent is absorbed as heat. As the Arctic sea ice melts,
however, and the incoming sunlight hits the much darker open water,
only 6 percent is reflected back into space and 94 percent is converted
into heat. This may account for the accelerating shrinkage of the
Arctic sea ice and the rising regional temperature that directly
affects the Greenland ice sheet.
If all the ice in the Arctic Ocean melts, it will not affect sea level
because the ice is already in the water. But it will lead to a much
warmer Arctic region as more of the incoming sunlight is absorbed as
heat. This is of particular concern because Greenland lies largely
within the Arctic Circle. As the Arctic region warms, the island’s ice
sheet—up to 1 mile thick in places—is beginning to melt.
The second positive feedback mechanism also has to do with ice melting.
As an ice sheet’s surface begins to melt, some of the water filters
down through cracks in the glacier, lubricating the surface between the
glacier and the rock beneath it. This accelerates the glacial flow and
the calving of icebergs into the surrounding ocean. The relatively warm
water flowing through the glacier also carries surface heat deep inside
the ice sheet far faster than would simple conduction.
Several recent studies report that the melting of the Greenland ice sheet is accelerating. A study published in Science in September 2006 reported that the rate of ice melt on the vast island
has tripled over the last several years. In October 2006, a team of
NASA scientists reported that the flow of glaciers into the sea was
accelerating. Eric Rignot, a glaciologist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion
Laboratory, said, “None of this has been predicted by numerical models,
and therefore all projections of the contribution of Greenland to sea
level [rise] are way below reality.”
At the other end
of the earth, the 2-kilometer-thick Antarctic ice sheet, which covers a
continent about twice the size of Australia and contains 70 percent of
the world’s fresh water, is also beginning to melt. Ice shelves that
extend from the continent into the surrounding seas are starting to
break up at an alarming pace.
In May 2007, a team of scientists from NASA and the University of
Colorado reported satellite data showing widespread snow-melt on the
interior of the Antarctic ice sheet over an area the size of
California. Konrad Steffen, one of the scientists involved, observed,
“Antarctica has shown little to no warming in the recent past with the
exception of the Antarctic Peninsula, but now large regions are showing
the first signs of the impacts of warming.”
The International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED) has
analyzed the effect of a 10-meter rise in sea level, providing a sense
of what the melting of the world’s largest ice sheets could mean. The
IIED study begins by pointing out that 634 million people live along
coasts at or below 10 meters above sea level, in what they call the Low
Elevation Coastal Zone. This massive vulnerable group includes one
eighth of the world’s urban population.
One of the countries most vulnerable is China, with 144 million
potential climate refugees. India and Bangladesh are next, with 63 and
62 million respectively. Viet Nam has 43 million vulnerable people, and
Indonesia, 42 million. Others in the top 10 include Japan with 30
million, Egypt with 26 million, and the United States with 23 million.
The world has never seen such a massive potential displacement of
people. Some refugees could simply retreat to higher ground within
their own country. Others—facing extreme crowding in the interior regions of their
homeland—would seek refuge elsewhere. Bangladesh, already one of the
world’s most densely populated countries, would face a far greater
concentration: in effect, 62 million of its people would be forced to
move in with the 97 million living on higher ground.
Not only would some of the world’s largest cities, such as Shanghai,
Kolkata, London, and New York, be partly or entirely inundated, but
vast areas of productive farmland would also be lost. The rice-growing
river deltas and floodplains of Asia would be covered with salt water,
depriving Asia of part of its food supply.
In the end, the question is whether governments are strong enough to
withstand the political and economic stress of relocating large numbers
of people while suffering losses of housing and industrial facilities.
The relocation is not only an internal matter, as a large share of the
displaced people will want to move to other countries. Can governments
withstand these stresses, or will more and more states fail?
# # #
Adapted from Chapter 3, “Rising Temperatures and Rising Seas ,” in Lester R. Brown, Plan B 3.0: Mobilizing to Save Civilization (New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 2008), available for free downloading and purchase at www.earthpolicy.org/Books/PB3/index.htm.
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