The study found that if global temperatures increase by 3°C above pre-industrial levels, the ice shelves around Antarctica will collapse by the next few centuries, triggering sea level rise of 0.6 to 3 meters by 2300 and up to 9 meters by 5000 due to the continued melting of the continental ice sheets for thousands of years; the researchers concluded that deep cuts in emissions over the next decade are necessary to avoid catastrophic and long-lasting sea level rise from Antarctic ice sheet collapse.
The study found that if global temperatures increase by 3°C above pre-industrial levels, the ice shelves around Antarctica will collapse by the next few centuries, triggering sea level rise of 0.6 to 3 meters by 2300 and up to 9 meters by 5000 due to the continued melting of the continental ice sheets for thousands of years; the researchers concluded that deep cuts in emissions over the next decade are necessary to avoid catastrophic and long-lasting sea level rise from Antarctic ice sheet collapse.
The study found that if global temperatures increase by 3°C above pre-industrial levels, the ice shelves around Antarctica will collapse by the next few centuries, triggering sea level rise of 0.6 to 3 meters by 2300 and up to 9 meters by 5000 due to the continued melting of the continental ice sheets for thousands of years; the researchers concluded that deep cuts in emissions over the next decade are necessary to avoid catastrophic and long-lasting sea level rise from Antarctic ice sheet collapse.
Study finds that a global temperature increase of 3C would cause ice shelves to disappear, triggering sea-level rise that would continue for thousands of years A team of researchers has found that steep cuts to emissions during the next decade are the only way to avoid a catastrophic collapse of Antarctic ice sheets and associated sea-level rise that will continue for thousands of years. The study, published in the journal Nature on Wednesday, found that should the global temperature increase to around 3C (5.4F) above the pre-industrial era then the ice shelves that hold back the giant continental ice sheets would be lost over the next few centuries. This would trigger a collapse that would go on for thousands of years, raising sea levels by 0.6 metres to 3 metres (2-10ft) by the year 2300 depending on how high manmade greenhouse gas emissions remain. Our descendants living in the year 5000 will continue to suffer the consequences of todays fossil fuel burning, as sea levels continue to rise up to 9 metres (30ft) above current levels.