The Prague Post - Thinning Greenland ice sheet may mean more sea level rise: study

EUR -
AED 4.292614
AFN 79.837051
ALL 97.159902
AMD 446.723279
ANG 2.091992
AOA 1071.837405
ARS 1664.424843
AUD 1.769818
AWG 2.103935
AZN 1.988884
BAM 1.955018
BBD 2.355528
BDT 142.363073
BGN 1.956194
BHD 0.440669
BIF 3489.959679
BMD 1.168853
BND 1.50118
BOB 8.081768
BRL 6.318351
BSD 1.169517
BTN 103.068227
BWP 15.672532
BYN 3.959083
BYR 22909.511149
BZD 2.352239
CAD 1.622899
CDF 3361.620244
CHF 0.934515
CLF 0.02866
CLP 1124.307657
CNY 8.323692
CNH 8.326333
COP 4586.729591
CRC 589.856564
CUC 1.168853
CUP 30.974594
CVE 110.221868
CZK 24.420897
DJF 208.264049
DKK 7.465368
DOP 74.399295
DZD 151.861725
EGP 56.33262
ERN 17.532789
ETB 168.270954
FJD 2.62612
FKP 0.862849
GBP 0.865378
GEL 3.144585
GGP 0.862849
GHS 14.268417
GIP 0.862849
GMD 84.156913
GNF 10140.814843
GTQ 8.964454
GYD 244.694247
HKD 9.10334
HNL 30.645353
HRK 7.531614
HTG 152.976866
HUF 392.884115
IDR 19247.495923
ILS 3.89917
IMP 0.862849
INR 103.37451
IQD 1532.187323
IRR 49197.006337
ISK 143.195851
JEP 0.862849
JMD 187.25272
JOD 0.828745
JPY 172.850148
KES 151.074373
KGS 102.216238
KHR 4687.065628
KMF 491.501969
KPW 1051.956193
KRW 1628.176421
KWD 0.357154
KYD 0.97461
KZT 629.958098
LAK 25353.861724
LBP 104733.819975
LKR 353.198766
LRD 222.212094
LSL 20.55538
LTL 3.451318
LVL 0.707027
LYD 6.32339
MAD 10.557079
MDL 19.473213
MGA 5197.854824
MKD 61.510404
MMK 2454.105821
MNT 4203.952816
MOP 9.383748
MRU 46.769698
MUR 53.252757
MVR 18.01176
MWK 2027.963051
MXN 21.780809
MYR 4.932574
MZN 74.701652
NAD 20.55538
NGN 1763.611276
NIO 43.042236
NOK 11.609535
NPR 164.905943
NZD 1.973093
OMR 0.44942
PAB 1.169532
PEN 4.084967
PGK 4.959953
PHP 66.813925
PKR 331.98191
PLN 4.263261
PYG 8377.542553
QAR 4.263931
RON 5.074452
RSD 117.185678
RUB 99.556981
RWF 1694.70059
SAR 4.385128
SBD 9.612437
SCR 17.323544
SDG 701.894094
SEK 10.952476
SGD 1.501537
SHP 0.918535
SLE 27.321897
SLL 24510.252426
SOS 668.424139
SRD 46.022365
STD 24192.889116
STN 24.489893
SVC 10.233908
SYP 15197.250528
SZL 20.534525
THB 37.216457
TJS 11.099109
TMT 4.102673
TND 3.411065
TOP 2.737566
TRY 48.267459
TTD 7.937826
TWD 35.486719
TZS 2881.221535
UAH 48.252686
UGX 4105.393495
USD 1.168853
UYU 46.711521
UZS 14450.221774
VES 182.549419
VND 30855.955616
VUV 139.202577
WST 3.174494
XAF 655.686395
XAG 0.028503
XAU 0.000323
XCD 3.158883
XCG 2.107857
XDR 0.815463
XOF 655.686395
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.053357
ZAR 20.516589
ZMK 10521.075545
ZMW 28.273452
ZWL 376.370063
  • RIO

    0.2300

    62.1

    +0.37%

  • BTI

    0.0000

    56.26

    0%

  • CMSC

    0.1600

    24.3

    +0.66%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    77.27

    0%

  • BCC

    0.5800

    85.87

    +0.68%

  • SCS

    -0.1600

    16.72

    -0.96%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    24.34

    -0.12%

  • JRI

    0.2400

    14.02

    +1.71%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    24.14

    -0.25%

  • RYCEF

    0.1800

    14.73

    +1.22%

  • NGG

    0.3200

    70.68

    +0.45%

  • BP

    0.6700

    34.76

    +1.93%

  • VOD

    -0.2100

    11.65

    -1.8%

  • RELX

    -2.0600

    45.13

    -4.56%

  • GSK

    -0.2800

    40.5

    -0.69%

  • AZN

    -0.4100

    80.81

    -0.51%

Thinning Greenland ice sheet may mean more sea level rise: study
Thinning Greenland ice sheet may mean more sea level rise: study / Photo: Kerem Yücel - AFP

Thinning Greenland ice sheet may mean more sea level rise: study

Part of Greenland's ice sheet is thinning further inland than previously believed, which will likely lead to greater sea level rise by the end of this century, a new study found Wednesday.

Text size:

The findings pertain to a northeast section of the giant ice block covering, but the trend is likely happening elsewhere on Greenland and Earth's other ice sheet, in Antarctica.

The implications are worrying, as sea level rise already threatens millions of people living along coasts that could find themselves underwater in the decades and centuries to come.

Scientists have previously focused on the edges of Greenland's ice sheet to examine active melting as global temperatures rise, largely using satellite data.

But the authors of Wednesday's study looked further inland, over 100 kilometres from the coast.

What they found was alarming: thinning from Greenland's coast stretched back 200 to 300 kilometres (125 to 185 miles).

"What we see happening at the front reaches far back into the heart of the ice sheet," said first author Shfaqat Abbas Khan in a press release about the study, published in Nature.

"The new model really captures what's going on inland, the old ones do not... you end up with a completely different mass change, or sea level projection," he told AFP in an interview.

The researchers installed GPS stations on the ice sheet to gather more precise information, and also used satellite data and numerical modelling, all of which provided a new set of data likely to alter global sea level rise projections.

The research was conducted at the Northeast Greenland Ice Stream (NEGIS), which covers an estimated 12 percent of Greenland, according to co-author Mathieu Morlighem.

It found that the thinning could add between 13.5 and 15.5 millimetres to sea levels by the end of this century -- equivalent to the entire Greenland ice sheet's contribution during the past 50 years.

"The NEGIS could lose six times more ice than existing climate models estimate," the report found.

- 'Reduce CO2' -

One reason for the inland thinning is the intrusion of warm ocean currents, which in 2012 caused the floating extension of the NEGIS to collapse.

That event "has accelerated ice flow and triggered a wave of rapid ice thinning that has spread upstream".

The Greenland ice sheet is currently the main factor in swelling the Earth's oceans, according to NASA, with the Arctic region heating at a faster rate than the rest of the planet.

In a landmark report on climate science last year, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) said the Greenland ice sheet would contribute up to 18 centimetres to sea level rise by 2100 under the highest emissions scenario.

The massive ice sheet, two kilometres thick, contains enough frozen water to lift global seas by over seven metres (23 feet) in total.

The researchers will now extend their methods to look at other glaciers on Greenland and Antarctica, and some new data could be available in a year or so.

Earth's surface has warmed, on average, nearly 1.2 degrees Celsius since pre-industrial times, unleashing a catalogue of impacts from heatwaves to more intense storms.

Under the Paris climate deal, countries have agreed to limit warming to well under 2C.

World leaders are currently meeting in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt, for UN climate talks aimed at slashing harmful emissions and boosting funding to green developing country economies.

Khan said the thinning trend on Greenland's ice sheet will be near impossible to reverse, but can at least be slowed with the right policies in place.

"I really hope that they agree on a reduction on CO2 and as soon as possible," he said in a message to leaders at the COP27 climate talks.

I.Mala--TPP