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Sea level will rise fast even if we limit global warming to 1.5掳C

Satellite observations show the ice sheets are melting faster than expected, and slowing sea level rise to a manageable rate would require lowering the global temperature below the current level
Rising seas will threaten many coastal cities
Hugh R Hastings/Getty Images

Limiting global warming to 1.5掳C above the pre-industrial baseline won鈥檛 be enough to stop sea levels from rising by several metres over the coming centuries, according to a review of all the latest evidence.

鈥淚 think sometimes there鈥檚 a misunderstanding that 1.5掳C will mean all our problems go away,鈥 says 聽at Durham University in the UK. 鈥淚t should absolutely be our target, but in no sense will it slow or stop sea level rise from melting ice sheets.鈥

The world is currently on course for roughly 2.9掳C of warming by 2100. That would lead to the loss of both the Greenland and West Antarctic ice sheets, says at the University of Bristol in the UK. 鈥淪o if we鈥檙e talking about long-term commitments, that鈥檚 in excess of 12 metres of sea level rise,鈥 says Bamber.

Stokes, Bamber and their colleagues have reviewed three lines of evidence: satellite observations of ice loss and sea level rise over the past three decades, studies of warm periods in the past and computer models of ice sheets.

Early computer models, which didn鈥檛 include many key processes, suggested that ice sheets would take a long time to respond to warming, says Bamber. In fact, the satellite observations show that the Greenland and West Antarctic ice sheets are responding rapidly.

鈥淭he observations show a very different picture,鈥 says Bamber. 鈥淪ome of the mass loss we鈥檝e seen in Greenland has been really quite staggering, really unprecedented in comparison to what the models had predicted.鈥

Not only are Greenland and West Antarctica already losing ice, the trend is accelerating, says Stokes. 鈥淎nd all of this is happening at just 1.2 degrees of warming,鈥 he says. 鈥淪o the idea that 1.5 is going to somehow fix this problem is misleading.鈥

Studies of previous warm spells during the past 3 million years show that the sea level was many metres higher during these periods, says Stokes.

The last report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), published in 2021, predicted 1 to 2 metres of sea level rise over many centuries if the rise in temperature was limited to 1.5掳C, says Stokes.

鈥淲e鈥檙e bringing that forward,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 very clear now that, actually, we鈥檙e starting to see some of those worst-case scenarios play out almost in front of us in terms of the satellite record of mass balance.鈥

To merely slow sea level rise from the melting ice sheets to a manageable level, the average global temperature needs to be reduced to around 1掳C above the pre-industrial baseline, the team estimates.

While higher-income countries can defend their coasts against rising sea levels, it will get harder and more expensive as the seas keep rising, says Bamber. 鈥淎nd then, of course, there鈥檒l be some countries that just haven鈥檛 got that money.鈥

This is why taking action is so important, says Stokes. 鈥淓very fraction of a degree really matters for ice sheets,鈥 he says. 鈥淵es, tipping points and thresholds might exist, but I think sometimes they can distract from the basic knowledge that actually every fraction of a degree really matters.鈥

Journal reference:

Communications Earth & Environment

Topics: Climate change