LONDON: Half of Greenland and vast areas of Antarctica are destined to melt if global warming continues at the same pace until the end of the century, scientists have warned. Their research shows that the loss of so much ice will trigger dramatic rises in sea levels, ultimately swamping low-lying islands and coastal regions and threatening the flood defences of cities such as London. The last time so much ice was lost from the poles — in a period between ice ages 129,000 years ago — global sea levels rose by 4 to 6 metres.
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The major concern is that unless climate change slows down significantly, the eventual loss of polar ice and a subsequent 6-m rise in sea levels will be unavoidable. "There has been an increasing number of observations from the ice sheets suggesting they are responding faster to climate change than anticipated. Now along come our results showing these kinds of changes occurred in the past and lead to large ice sheet retreat and sea level rise. There's a threshold beyond which we'll be committed to this melting and sea level rise irreversibly in the future and that will come later this century," said Prof. Overpeck. A one-metre rise in sea level would see the Maldives disappear, make most of Bangladesh uninhabitable and put cities such as New Orleans "out of business," according to Prof. Overpeck. The research is published in the U.S. journal Science on Friday.
The melting 129,000 years ago was driven by natural processes. This time greenhouse gas emissions have been warming the planet since the industrial age. "We know what natural causes occurred 129,000 years ago and we know what's causing climate change now. What's going on now is driven by human activity and if we want these changes to occur we just carry on as we are. If we don't want them, we have to stop concentrations of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere from going much above 560 parts per million, double the pre-industrial level," said Prof. Overpeck.
Carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere stand at around 380 parts per million, but many scientists believe they will rise to 550ppm by the middle of the century.
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