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Earth Science

Global Heating Pace Risks 'Unstoppable' Sea Level Rise as Antarctic Ice Sheet Melts (theguardian.com) 247

The current pace of global heating risks unleashing "rapid and unstoppable" sea level rise from the melting of Antarctica's vast ice sheet, a new research paper has warned. From a report: Unless planet-heating emissions are swiftly reduced to meet the goals of the Paris climate agreement, the world faces a situation where there is an "abrupt jump" in the pace of Antarctic ice loss around 2060, the study states, fueling sea level rise and placing coastal cities in greater peril. "If the world warms up at a rate dictated by current policies we will see the Antarctic system start to get away from us around 2060," said Robert DeConto, an expert in polar climate change at the University of Massachusetts and lead author of the study. "Once you put enough heat into the climate system, you are going to lose those ice shelves, and once that is set in motion you can't reverse it."

DeConto added: "The oceans would have to cool back down before the ice sheet could heal, which would take a very long time. On a societal timescale it would essentially be a permanent change." This tipping point for Antarctica could be triggered by a global temperature rise of 3C (5.4F) above the preindustrial era, which many researchers say is feasible by 2100 under governments' current policies. The new research, published in Nature, finds that ice loss from Antarctica would be "irreversible on multi-century timescales" should this happen, helping raise the world's oceans by 17cm to 21cm (6.69in to 8.27in) by the end of the century.

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Global Heating Pace Risks 'Unstoppable' Sea Level Rise as Antarctic Ice Sheet Melts

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  • Psychics? (Score:4, Funny)

    by photonrider ( 571060 ) on Thursday May 06, 2021 @11:20AM (#61355006)
    They've been so good at their predictions so far...
  • Stop the hysteria (Score:2, Interesting)

    by iggymanz ( 596061 )

    A mere fifth of a meter over 80 years, that's nothing. Anything built to competent civil engineering standards will be fine, stupidly built things can be demolished and moved. There is no real problem here.

    • by spun ( 1352 )

      The problem is, who pays for it? Personally, I think the people who fuck something up should pay for the cost of fixing it. That's called "personal accountability."

      • So you are saying the people that own shittily constructed buildings not built to standards should pay to fix their own shit instead of blaming others that their biulding cant handle a yearly tidal wave half a cm high?
        • by spun ( 1352 )

          Why should people who OWN the buildings pay? Even when you are trying to be facetious, you can't construct a logical argument.

          First, they did not BUILD the buildings, so they aren't to blame. When people did build the buildings, there was not the same danger. That came later, due to other people's actions. The people who cause the issues with the environment should pay for the damage they caused. I don't see what's even controversial about that.

      • Yes, like New Orleans being below sea level but relying on dirt dykes, they should quit being dumb and build proper shit if they want to live there and not be a carcass floating down street with maggots chewing into their body at the water line, next time.

        • by spun ( 1352 )

          Is New Orleans the only place facing issues with sea level rise? No. They are not. The people of New Orleans did not, themselves, build those dykes. They are not "dirt." and when they were built, they were more than enough to handle the issue. But, get this: things have changed since those measures were put in place. And people caused those changes. If someone does something that harms you, wouldn't you want recompense?

          I honestly don't see how you are even arguing that people who fucked something up should

          • No, those levees had failed before, Hurricane Betsy 1965 to be precise. They are dirt, earthen. They turn to mud when overrun and it's game over (again, just like 1965).

            I'm saying city of New Orleans put part of city below sea level. Fuck up like that and you'll be screwed. You're going to tell me it's not their own damn dumb-ass fault?

            I'm not a moron enough to live behind an earthen levee. If I did, I'd have reasonable expectation of becoming a corpse floating in street with maggots chewing at the w

            • by spun ( 1352 )

              Why are you going on about New Orleans like it represents every area impacted by climate change? It's not really representative of the problem in general. I mean, what about people living on islands? Fuck them, right? Should be smart enough to be born somewhere else, LOL!

              And anyway, the Levee system was built by the Army Corps of Engineers, not "New Orleans." And they have been much improved since Katrina. It was never just "dirt." https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

              I get the feeling you are just fucking arou

              • The levees that failed were "natural levees" of sand, clay and silt. They were there before Army Corps of engineers messed with them and made similar ones. Sometimes people have the mistaken notion that the concrete flood walls on top of those were the entire "levee" not realizing it was tiny part on top utterly dependent on the mass of the natural one which was "rinse away" once water went over it like your hair conditioner. Ridiculous to depend on such a thing in 20th century.

                People on coast don't ne

    • 20 cm won't be divided evenly around the globe now, will it? If you even consider using a bit of physics you'll understand that. We're on a spinning ball so a fifth of a metre on average, but way more at the equator and less at the poles in reality. Already some Pacific island nations are being flooded.
    • I am not a climate alarmist. But there are a lot of places (see Florida for example) where 20 cm will put large areas underwater. That is just a topographical fact. There are also some islands that would be in big trouble (see the Tuamotos). Maybe not so many people live on those islands.

  • I'd just like to see a 1 or 2m rise this year just so I can say, "we told you so," to the twats who won't get with the program.
  • "Risks unstoppable sea level rise"?

    So the premise is that sea level rise and global warming is "stoppable"? Do these people think themselves gods? Science has clearly outlined that global warming was ongoing ever since last Ice Age ended tends of thousands of years ago, back when places like Denmark were covered by glaciers. This is a part of natural cycle of the planet.

    Our problem is that our emissions of CO2 into the atmosphere accelerated the warming. Not that we "controlled the sea level rise" and then

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

        It's not that hard to cool the planet. Blast enough nuclear explosives in the ground the release massive amounts of dust into atmosphere.

        That's what fears of nuclear winter were.

        The problem there is actually not so much the fallout as the fact that while global warming is about increase of energy state of the planet and therefore abundance of life on it, global cooling is the time of global death. Almost nothing survives on glaciers, and far less life lives in tundra compared to temperate areas, much less j

  • too late (Score:4, Informative)

    by sdinfoserv ( 1793266 ) on Thursday May 06, 2021 @12:06PM (#61355212)
    For those who aren’t paying attention, not only is the perma-frost melting, but it’s actually burning in the summer. https://www.nature.com/article... [nature.com]
    The oceans have warmed and are releasing trapped methane from the ocean floor, https://oceanexplorer.noaa.gov... [noaa.gov]
    We are currently at 409 parts per million of CO2. The last time the earth broke 400ppm was the Pliocene Epoch, between 2.6 and 5.3 million years ago. 5.3 Million years ago: https://www.nationalgeographic... [nationalgeographic.org]
    Hint: during the Pliocene Epoch the oceans were 75-80 feet higher: https://www.nature.com/article... [nature.com]
    Sorry kiddos, we’ve hit feedback loop and our grand kids will be really, really uncomfortable on very crowded planet that doesn’t want to grow food. We have passed the point of being able to fix it, let alone convince US republicans there's a problem. Turn of this next century is going to be bummer.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by DarkOx ( 621550 )

      Sorry kiddos, weâ(TM)ve hit feedback loop and our grand kids will be really, really uncomfortable on very crowded planet that doesnâ(TM)t want to grow food. We have passed the point of being able to fix it, let alone convince US republicans there's a problem.

      Did you ever stop to think some of us don't listen to you because your position is bonkers! You say we are in an unstoppable feedback loop, but decry anyone who isn't trying to do what you say is impossible. I'd like to walk on the moon - would you suggest I focus on trying jump higher?

  • The Mars rover's MOXIE experiment proved that we can (a) sequester CO2 from the atmosphere...hell, we did it on another planet even. So, why not build huge MOXIE stations here, say 4 on each continent, and start pulling CO2 from the air, releasing the oxygen, converting the CO via H2O reaction to methane, then storing the methane for other uses. Hell, we could even burn off the methane, which produces water vapor and CO2, and the CO2 could be fed back into the system. Expensive? Yep! But expense is meaning
    • Yeah and also work on efficient methane to liquid fuel processes. Liquid fuels are much easier to store and just as easy to burn as methane. That way we can keep our liquid fuel infrastructure which is, truth be told, very useful.

      • by DarkOx ( 621550 )

        Who cares about efficiencies if the inputs are sufficiently cheap and abundant. Centralize the stuff enough (much like oil terminals and the like are now) and you can power it with vast arrays of floating solar cells, and wind turbines, and tidal power plants in upper and lower latitudes.

        A lot of sun shines down on this marble.

    • MOXIE [mit.edu] produces oxygen from carbon dioxide by splitting one oxygen atom off, and thus produces carbon monoxide as a byproduct. This is no big deal on Mars (which already has carbon monoxide as a component of its atmosphere), but we probably don't want to do it on Earth.

      In any case, it takes energy.

      If that energy were generated from fossil fuels... it's a net loss. If it's not produced from fossil fuels, instead of using energy to reduce carbon dioxide, it would make more sense to take the same energy and us

      • Using nuclear power to produce liquid hydrocarbon fuels means closing the carbon loop and making every currently existing hydrocarbon burner a carbon neutral vehicle. This is highly valuable for rockets, aircraft, and large ships where the energy density of batteries and other energy storage would make them impractical.

        As it is electric vehicles are highly impractical outside of a few niche applications. A commuter car that takes a round trip of under 100 miles is a small portion of the total transportati

  • tsia.

    If someone removes that object of fear, the fear-addicted just find something else to be afraid of.

    I wonder if this is a particular vulnerability of democracy, since the political class ALSO agrees that purveying fear is useful?

  • over climate change. Like I always say, climate change is years from now but rent's due at the end of the month. If you care about climate change you fix that.
  • The deep ocean was cold and mixed with the surface water to regulate temperatures.
    For decades this heat sink has been slowly warming.
    It is a gigantic volume of water/heat sink.
    You're all pretty well fucked.
    Unless you're a surfer because it means more extreme weather storm swells.
    Huey, the God of surf
    http://mountainman.com.au/surf... [mountainman.com.au]

  • I don't get worried about sea level rise. Who cares? Sea levels have risen and fallen throughout mankind's history. Dozens of cities litter the sea floor. Somehow, we manage to not drown every time.

    So, if you're worried about sea level rise, go inland.

Solutions are obvious if one only has the optical power to observe them over the horizon. -- K.A. Arsdall

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