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Scientists say next few years vital to securing the future of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet

Scientists say next few years vital to securing the future of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet
Grounded ice sheet extent in transient Run C and corresponding equilibrium states for ocean temperatures close to present-day. Credit: Communications Earth & Environment (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s43247-025-02366-2

Collapse of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet could be triggered by very little ocean warming above present-day, leading to a devastating four meters of global sea level rise to play out over hundreds of years, according to a study now in Communications Earth & Environment, co-authored by the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK). However, the authors emphasize that immediate actions to reduce emissions could still avoid a catastrophic outcome.

Scientists at PIK, the Norwegian research center NORCE and Northumbria University in the United Kingdom conducted going back 800,000 years to give an extended view of how the vast Antarctic Ice Sheet has responded in the past to Earth's climate as it moved between cold "glacial" and warmer "interglacial" periods.

"In the past 800,000 years, the Antarctic Ice Sheet has had two stable states that it has repeatedly tipped between. One, with the West Antarctic Ice Sheet in place, is the state we are currently in. The other state is where the West Antarctic Ice Sheet has collapsed," lead author David Chandler from NORCE commented.

The major driver of change between the two states is rising ocean temperatures around Antarctica, because the heat melting the ice in Antarctica is supplied mostly by the ocean, rather than the atmosphere. Once the ice sheet has tipped to a collapsed state, reversal back to the stable present-day state would require several thousand years of temperatures at or below pre-industrial conditions.

"Once tipping has been triggered, it is self-sustaining and seems very unlikely to be stopped before contributing to about four meters of sea-level rise. And this would be practically irreversible," Chandler said.

"It takes tens of thousands of years for an ice sheet to grow, but just decades to destabilize it by burning . Now we only have a narrow window to act," said co-author Julius Garbe from PIK.

More information: David M. Chandler et al, Antarctic Ice Sheet tipping in the last 800,000 years warns of future ice loss, Communications Earth & Environment (2025).

Journal information: Communications Earth & Environment

Citation: Scientists say next few years vital to securing the future of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet (2025, June 3) retrieved 5 June 2025 from /news/2025-06-scientists-years-vital-future-west.html
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