Each degree Celsius rise in global temperatures is likely to
raise world’s sea levels by more than 2 meters within the next 2,000 years, a
new study has warned.
While thermal expansion of the ocean and melting mountain
glaciers are the most important factors causing sea-level change today, the
Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets will be the dominant contributors within the
next two millennia, according to the study published in the Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences.
Half of that rise might come from ice-loss in Antarctica
which is currently contributing less than 10 per cent to global sea-level rise.
“CO2, once emitted by burning fossil fuels, stays an awful long
time in the atmosphere. Consequently, the warming it causes also persists,”
said Anders Levermann, lead author of the study and research domain co-chair at
the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research.
The oceans and ice sheets are slow in responding, simply because
of their enormous mass, which is why observed sea-level rise is now measured in
millimeters per year.
“The problem is: once heated out of balance, they simply don’t
stop. We’re confident that our estimate is robust because of the combination of
physics and data that we use,” Levermann said in a statement.
The study is the first to combine evidence from early Earth’s
climate history with comprehensive computer simulations using physical models
of all four major contributors to long-term global sea-level rise.
During the 20th century, sea level rose by about 0.2 meters, and
it is projected to rise by significantly less than two meters by 2100 even for
the strongest scenarios considered.
At the same time, past climate records, which average sea-level
and temperature changes over a long time, suggest much higher sea levels during
periods of Earth history that were warmer than present.
For the new study, the international team of scientists used data
from sediments from the bottom of the sea and ancient raised shorelines found
on various coastlines around the world.
If global mean temperature rises by 4 degrees compared to
pre-industrial times, which in a business-as-usual scenario is projected to
happen within less than a century, the Antarctic ice sheet will contribute
about 50 per cent of sea-level rise over the next two millennia, researchers
said.
Greenland will add another 25 per cent to the total sea-level
rise, while the thermal expansion of the oceans’ water, currently the largest
component of sea-level rise, will contribute about 20 per cent, and the
contribution from mountain glaciers will decline to less than 5 per cent,
mostly because many of them will shrink to a minimum, the study found.
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