Current:Home > InvestPolar Ice Is Disappearing, Setting Off Climate Alarms -Elevate Money Guide
Polar Ice Is Disappearing, Setting Off Climate Alarms
View
Date:2025-04-15 08:44:04
Sign up to receive our latest reporting on climate change, energy and environmental justice, sent directly to your inbox. Subscribe here.
Turns out, when you heat up ice, it melts. And with 2017 likely going down as one of the warmest years on record worldwide, this year’s climate change signal was amplified at the Earth’s poles.
There, decades-old predictions of intense warming have been coming true. The ice-covered poles, both north and south, continue to change at a breathtaking pace, with profound long-term consequences, according to the scientists who study them closely.
And the consequences are destined to spill over into other parts of the globe, through changing atmospheric patterns, sea currents and feedback loops of ever intensifying melting.
The past year may not have broken annual records, but it provided ample evidence of where long-term trends are heading. “Even though we’re not setting records every year—and we don’t expect to because of natural variability—we’re not any where close to the averages we saw in the 1980s, 1990s and before,” said Walt Meier, a senior researcher at the National Snow and Ice Data Center.
The area covered by sea ice in the Arctic hit record lows through the winter of 2017. In March, when the sea ice hit its largest extent of the year, it was lower than it ever had been in the nearly 40-year satellite record. The spring melt began a month earlier than normal, and though the pace of decline slowed some over the summer, the Bering and Chukchi Seas along Alaska’s coast remained ice-free longer into the fall than ever before.
In November, NASA reported that two to four times as many coastal glaciers around Greenland are at risk of accelerated melting than previously thought. Greenland is losing an average of 260 billion tons of ice each year. In mid-September, a surge of warm air caused a spike in surface melting in southern Greenland—one of the largest spikes to occur in September since 1978.
In Antarctica, the ice also recorded new lows. The annual low-point in ice coverage, which happened in early March, was the lowest on record. A few months later, in July, a trillion-ton section of Antarctica’s Larsen C ice shelf broke off.
“There’s no evidence that anything is recovering here,” said Mark Serreze, the director of the NSIDC. “What we’ve seen historically is a downward trend in ice extent in all months. Superimposed on that are the ups and downs of natural variability. We’re going to continue to head downward.”
When the Jet Stream Gets Loopy
The consequences are profound.
The modern weather system has been defined by cold poles and warmer mid-latitudes. Along the boundary of the regions, where the cold air meets the warm, you’ll find bands of strong wind, known as the jet stream.
The jet stream typically behaves in expected or at least understood ways, but every now and then something wacky happens. It dips, it wobbles, and suddenly the northeast finds itself in the chilly embrace of a polar vortex; or California finds itself in yet another drought; or Seattle is doused in days of rain.
“It’s basically extreme weather when you get that loopy jetstream,” said Meier.
A growing body of science—some of which was recently published—is finding that as there are more years with historically low sea ice levels, there is an associated uptick in wobbly jet streams.
“Trying to ferret out whether this is due to some real change in the system or if it’s just random is difficult,” Meier said. That has led to some debate among scientists, but increasingly, the picture is becoming clearer that the loss of ice and the wobblier jet streams seem to be correlated.
“When you’re taking out 30, 40, almost 50 percent of the ice cover, that’s a big change in the environment,” Meier said. “Whether we’re seeing it yet, there’s still some debate, but whether there will be an effect as we continue to lose ice, I think that’s pretty obvious.”
Anxious About the Outlook
With the icy regions known as the cryosphere in a downward trend, the long-term outlook is disconcerting.
“We are looking at an ice-free Arctic Ocean sometime in the 2040s,” said Serreze. “There’s no evidence that we’ve seen anything like this before.”
Over the past couple of years, a new body of research has emerged looking on the implications for sea rise. And many scientists are warning that the outlook is more dire than previously feared.
Ted Scambos, lead scientist with the National Snow and Ice Data Center, said that while the current pace of melting is not alarming, a series of papers “has led to a realization that the West Antarctic Ice Sheet may already be in an irreversible retreat.”
If parts of the Antarctic ice sheets were to drain more quickly into the ocean, that could raise sea level by several feet within a few decades rather than centuries. Warning signs about a possible sudden disintegration in Antarctica suggest more than 3 feet of sea level rise is possible by the end of the century if societies continuing releasing greenhouse gases at a high rate.
The Biggest Threat
Greenland is melting, too—for now, it’s the biggest threat. “Greenland has become Loserville,” said Jason Box, who tracks ice for the Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland.
“New observations from many different sources confirm that ice-sheet loss is accelerating,” the United States Global Change Research Program said in its comprehensive special report on climate science. “Up to 8.5 feet of global sea level rise is possible by 2100” in a worst-case emissions scenario. That’s almost 2 feet more than scientists expected just a few years ago.
“So we’re guaranteed significant sea level rise no matter what we do, even under the optimistic Paris scenario,” Box said. “We had better prepare.”
Coming next: local implications of sea level rise.
veryGood! (184)
Related
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Trump and 3 of his adult children will soon testify in fraud trial, New York attorney general says
- At least one killed and 20 wounded in a blast at convention center in India’s southern Kerala state
- Sailor missing at sea for 2 weeks found alive in life raft 70 miles off Washington coast
- Person accused of accosting Rep. Nancy Mace at Capitol pleads not guilty to assault charge
- Severe drought in the Amazon reveals millennia-old carvings
- Kentucky Derby winner Mage out of Breeders’ Cup Classic, trainer says horse has decreased appetite
- Run Amok With These 25 Glorious Secrets About Hocus Pocus
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- New Mexico Better Newspaper Contest Winners
Ranking
- Bodycam footage shows high
- The FDA warns consumers to stop using several eyedrop products due to infection risk
- Food delivery business Yelloh to lay off 750 employees nationwide, close 90 delivery centers
- West Virginia's Akok Akok 'stable' at hospital after 'medical emergency' in exhibition game
- From family road trips to travel woes: Americans are navigating skyrocketing holiday costs
- NASCAR Martinsville playoff race 2023: Start time, TV, streaming, lineup for Xfinity 500
- Israel says its war can both destroy Hamas and rescue hostages. Their families are less certain
- Alabama’s forgotten ‘first road’ gets a new tourism focus
Recommendation
Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
Jagger watches Barcelona wear Stones logo in ‘clasico’ but Beatles fan Bellingham gets Madrid winner
A Look at the Surprising Aftermath of Bill Gates and Melinda Gates' Divorce
North Macedonia police intercept a group of 77 migrants and arrest 7 suspected traffickers
Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
Maine hospital's trauma chief says it was sobering to see destructive ability of rounds used in shooting rampage
Oprah chooses Let Us Descend by Jesmyn Ward as new book club pick
Halloween candy sales not so sweet: Bloomberg report