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Climate change: On the edge
Greenland ice cap breaking up at twice
the rate it was five
years ago, says scientist Bush tried to gag
By Jim Hansen
Published: 17 February 2006

A satellite
study of the Greenland ice cap shows that it is melting far faster than
scientists had feared - twice as much ice is going into the sea as it
was five years ago. The implications for rising sea levels - and climate
change - could be dramatic.
Yet, a few
weeks ago, when I - a Nasa climate scientist - tried to talk to the
media about these issues following a lecture I had given calling for
prompt reductions in the emission of greenhouse gases, the Nasa public
affairs team - staffed by political appointees from the Bush
administration - tried to stop me doing so. I was not happy with that,
and I ignored the restrictions. The first line of Nasa's mission is to
understand and protect the planet.
This new
satellite data is a remarkable advance. We are seeing for the first time
the detailed behaviour of the ice streams that are draining the
Greenland ice sheet. They show that Greenland seems to be losing at
least 200 cubic kilometres of ice a year. It is different from even two
years ago, when people still said the ice sheet was in balance.
Hundreds of
cubic kilometres sounds like a lot of ice. But this is just the
beginning. Once a sheet starts to disintegrate, it can reach a tipping
point beyond which break-up is explosively rapid. The issue is how close
we are getting to that tipping point. The summer of 2005 broke all
records for melting in Greenland. So we may be on the edge.
Our
understanding of what is going on is very new. Today's forecasts of
sea-level rise use climate models of the ice sheets that say they can
only disintegrate over a thousand years or more. But we can now see that
the models are almost worthless. They treat the ice sheets like a single
block of ice that will slowly melt. But what is happening is much more
dynamic.
Once the
ice starts to melt at the surface, it forms lakes that empty down
crevasses to the bottom of the ice. You get rivers of water underneath
the ice. And the ice slides towards the ocean.
Our Nasa
scientists have measured this in Greenland. And once these ice streams
start moving, their influence stretches right to the interior of the ice
sheet. Building an ice sheet takes a long time, because it is limited by
snowfall. But destroying it can be explosively rapid.
How fast
can this go? Right now, I think our best measure is what happened in the
past. We know that, for instance, 14,000 years ago sea levels rose by
20m in 400 years - that is five metres in a century. This was towards
the end of the last ice age, so there was more ice around. But, on the
other hand, temperatures were not warming as fast as today.
How far can
it go? The last time the world was three degrees warmer than today -
which is what we expect later this century - sea levels were 25m higher.
So that is what we can look forward to if we don't act soon. None of the
current climate and ice models predict this. But I prefer the evidence
from the Earth's history and my own eyes. I think sea-level rise is
going to be the big issue soon, more even than warming itself.
It's hard
to say what the world will be like if this happens. It would be another
planet. You could imagine great armadas of icebergs breaking off
Greenland and melting as they float south. And, of course, huge areas
being flooded.
How long
have we got? We have to stabilise emissions of carbon dioxide within a
decade, or temperatures will warm by more than one degree. That will be
warmer than it has been for half a million years, and many things could
become unstoppable. If we are to stop that, we cannot wait for new
technologies like capturing emissions from burning coal. We have to act
with what we have. This decade, that means focusing on energy efficiency
and renewable sources of energy that do not burn carbon. We don't have
much time left.
Jim Hansen,
the director of the Nasa Goddard Institute for Space Studies in New
York, is President George Bush's top climate modeller. He was speaking
to Fred Pearce
A
satellite study of the Greenland ice cap shows that it is melting far
faster than scientists had feared - twice as much ice is going into the
sea as it was five years ago. The implications for rising sea levels -
and climate change - could be dramatic.
Yet, a
few weeks ago, when I - a Nasa climate scientist - tried to talk to the
media about these issues following a lecture I had given calling for
prompt reductions in the emission of greenhouse gases, the Nasa public
affairs team - staffed by political appointees from the Bush
administration - tried to stop me doing so. I was not happy with that,
and I ignored the restrictions. The first line of Nasa's mission is to
understand and protect the planet.
This new
satellite data is a remarkable advance. We are seeing for the first time
the detailed behaviour of the ice streams that are draining the
Greenland ice sheet. They show that Greenland seems to be losing at
least 200 cubic kilometres of ice a year. It is different from even two
years ago, when people still said the ice sheet was in balance.
Hundreds
of cubic kilometres sounds like a lot of ice. But this is just the
beginning. Once a sheet starts to disintegrate, it can reach a tipping
point beyond which break-up is explosively rapid. The issue is how close
we are getting to that tipping point. The summer of 2005 broke all
records for melting in Greenland. So we may be on the edge.
Our
understanding of what is going on is very new. Today's forecasts of
sea-level rise use climate models of the ice sheets that say they can
only disintegrate over a thousand years or more. But we can now see that
the models are almost worthless. They treat the ice sheets like a single
block of ice that will slowly melt. But what is happening is much more
dynamic.
Once the
ice starts to melt at the surface, it forms lakes that empty down
crevasses to the bottom of the ice. You get rivers of water underneath
the ice. And the ice slides towards the ocean.
Our Nasa
scientists have measured this in Greenland. And once these ice streams
start moving, their influence stretches right to the interior of the ice
sheet. Building an ice sheet takes a long time, because it is limited by
snowfall. But destroying it can be explosively rapid.
How fast
can this go? Right now, I think our best measure is what happened in the
past. We know that, for instance, 14,000 years ago sea levels rose by
20m in 400 years - that is five metres in a century. This was towards
the end of the last ice age, so there was more ice around. But, on the
other hand, temperatures were not warming as fast as today.
How far
can it go? The last time the world was three degrees warmer than today -
which is what we expect later this century - sea levels were 25m higher.
So that is what we can look forward to if we don't act soon. None of the
current climate and ice models predict this. But I prefer the evidence
from the Earth's history and my own eyes. I think sea-level rise is
going to be the big issue soon, more even than warming itself.
It's
hard to say what the world will be like if this happens. It would be
another planet. You could imagine great armadas of icebergs breaking off
Greenland and melting as they float south. And, of course, huge areas
being flooded.
How long
have we got? We have to stabilise emissions of carbon dioxide within a
decade, or temperatures will warm by more than one degree. That will be
warmer than it has been for half a million years, and many things could
become unstoppable. If we are to stop that, we cannot wait for new
technologies like capturing emissions from burning coal. We have to act
with what we have. This decade, that means focusing on energy efficiency
and renewable sources of energy that do not burn carbon. We don't have
much time left.
Jim
Hansen, the director of the Nasa Goddard Institute for Space Studies in
New York, is President George Bush's top climate modeller. He was
speaking to Fred Pearce
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