Updated
Updated · Earth.com · May 20
Study Says Antarctic Meltwater Feedback Could Add to 34 cm Sea-Level Rise by 2100
Updated
Updated · Earth.com · May 20

Study Says Antarctic Meltwater Feedback Could Add to 34 cm Sea-Level Rise by 2100

3 articles · Updated · Earth.com · May 20

Summary

  • Nature Geoscience research found Antarctic meltwater can alter ocean circulation in ways that accelerate further ice loss, a feedback loop the authors say most policy-shaping climate models do not include.
  • Fresh meltwater weakens the cold, dense barrier that normally blocks warmer deep-ocean currents from ice shelves, letting heat reach the ice base and intensify melting in a self-reinforcing cycle.
  • The effect is not uniform: in the Weddell Sea it amplifies melt, while in the West Antarctic Peninsula and Amundsen Sea upstream freshwater can briefly form a colder shield that slows local melting.
  • The IPCC now estimates Antarctic meltwater could add 28 to 34 centimeters of sea-level rise by 2100 under high-emissions scenarios, and the study argues those projections may be too low if these feedbacks prove large.
  • More than 680 million people live in low-lying coastal zones, and the team is building higher-resolution simulations through 2100 to identify which ice shelves may be closest to tipping points.

Insights

A hidden ocean cycle is accelerating Antarctica's melt. What other climate blind spots will we discover too late?
If ocean warmth is unlocking Antarctica's ice, can we reverse this newly found, self-fueling cycle?
Models underestimate sea-level rise. Which coastal cities now face a much shorter timeline for survival?