The melting of the Antarctic and Greenland ice sheets has raised sea levels by 11.1mm since 1992, a fifth of the total rise which threatens low-lying regions around the globe, a new study published on Thursday said.
The results of the study involving 47 researchers from 26 laboratories, which was supported by the European Space Agency and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, give the most accurate measurements of ice loss to date, they said in the journal Science.
Two-thirds of the ice loss was in Greenland and the remainder in Antarctica.
Together, the two receding ice sheets are now adding 0.95mm to sea levels a year compared with 0.27mm per year in the 1990s, the study said.
There have been at least 29 studies on ice sheet mass since 1998 which arrive at an average for the melt’s contribution to sea level rises of around 1mm a year, the study’s leader Andrew Shepherd told reporters.
The researchers used 10 different satellites to measure the shape, speed and weight of the ice sheets from space, as well as ground observations.
Past ice loss assessments typically used just one of those techniques, Shepherd said.
“The study effectively ends 20 years of uncertainty over the perception of our community. It provides a single climate record for people to use rather than the 40 or 50 which existed before this paper,” Shepherd said.
In 2007 scientists on the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change published a report to assess scientific and technical information on climate change and its effects.
The report estimated a total global sea level rise of 2mm a year from the early 1990s to last year, while research by the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research this week estimated the rise has been as much as 3.2mm a year over the same period.
“We have pinpointed the areas of ice sheets where people should be concerned,” Shepherd said. “There are parts of Antarctic where the ice is not behaving in a normal way. It is unstable and its sea level contribution is rising year-on-year, Greenland even more so,” he said.
“That allows us to say to people who build models for future climate projections, ‘these are the areas you should concentrate on,’” he said, adding that continued monitoring of ice sheets is necessary.
see New Land on page 9
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