30 Aug 2022

Degree of sea level rise now inevitable, paper shows

3:30 pm on 30 August 2022

An ominous new study shows about a quarter of a metre of sea level rise is now inevitable - even if all climate-damaging actions stopped immediately.

Icebergs float in Baffin Bay near Pituffik, Greenland on 20 July, 2022, as captured with a drone during a NASA mission along with University of Texas scientists to measure melting Arctic sea ice. New observations from ICESAT-2 show remarkable Arctic Sea ice thinning in just three years. Over the past two decades, the Arctic has lost about one-third of its winter sea ice volume, largely due to a decline in sea ice that persists over several years, called multiyear ice, according to a new study. The study also found sea ice is likely thinner than previous estimates.

A new paper shows that ice melt from Greenland alone will cause an inevitable sea level rise of around quarter of a metre. Photo: KEREM YUCEL

The paper, published in the Nature Climate Change journal, showed that ice melt from Greenland alone would cause the rise.

It came as a separate OECD study showed member countries were incentivising consumption patterns in the wrong direction, with a huge increase in fossil fuel subsides last year.

'There is no bigger problem'

Previous studies of ice caps have relied on computers to model thawing - which has produced significantly variable results.

The new paper, by contrast, also used satellite measurements from the past two decades.

It further showed that if emissions continued, sea level rise of more than a metre was likely.

The study did not specify a timeline.

Many areas of New Zealand are vulnerable to sea rise.

There would be serious consequences for swathes of Auckland and Wellington's foreshore with as little as 10 centimetres of rise.

Victoria University climate scientist Professor James Renwick said action to reduce fossil fuel use could not be more urgent.

"We have to reduce emissions immediately, we've got to get to a 50 percent reduction globally this decade if we want to stave off those kinds of impacts down the track.

"There is no bigger problem to be dealing with, it amazes me that governments are still sort of talking about 'getting ready to do something' when we are staring absolutely catastrophic impacts in the face."

Queens Wharf, Wellington

Wellington's foreshore is one of the areas in New Zealand vulnerable to sea level rise. Photo: 123RF

Renwick said he happened to be at an Antarctica science conference today, and that continent's contribution to sea rise was expected to be far more than Greenland's.

"There is a threshold at around two degrees of warming where we definitely commit at least the west Antarctica ice sheet to irreversible melting, which would add three or four metres to sea level rise."

The planet has warmed on average about 1.1 degrees since 1850.

Countries have committed to efforts that - if followed through on completely - would keep warming to somewhere around 1.9 to 2.4 degrees.

But even the lower of those figures is far above the 1.5 degree mark above which scientists say there will be devastating consequences across the globe.

OECD report shows member fossil fuel subsidies soaring

One of the few truly effective ways of drastically reducing emissions is to stop burning fossil fuels.

But a new report from the OECD shows government subsides and support for fossil fuel production and consumption doubled in 2021 to nearly US$700 billion (NZ$1.1 trillion) compared to 2020.

It came as energy prices rose with the rebound in the global economy.

It is expected the Russian invasion of Ukraine will see further rises in subsidies this year.

Renwick said the global economy was still powered by fossil fuels so the transition needed to be managed, but the change needed much more urgency.

"Because if we don't, the other side of the coin is [that] the instability caused by climate change will wreck everything anyway.

"We are in a really dangerous situation here, we need action as fast as possible."

He said the devastating flooding in Pakistan right now was just one example of the kinds of future devastation global warming would make increasingly common.

Get the RNZ app

for ad-free news and current affairs