Water rushes along the surface of the Greenland Ice Sheet through a supra-glacial stream channel, southwest of Ilulissat, Greenland.(Photo: Ian Joughin, AP)
WASHINGTON -- Fueled by global warming, polar ice sheets in
Greenland and Antarctica are now melting three times faster than they
did in the 1990s, a new scientific study says.
So far, that's only
added about half an inch to rising sea levels, not as bad as some
earlier worst case scenarios. But the melting's quicker pace, especially
in Greenland, has ice scientists worried.
One of the biggest wild
cards in climate change has been figuring out how much the melting of
the massive sheets of ice at the two poles would add to the seas. Until
now, researchers haven't agreed on how fast the mile-thick sheets are
thawing - and if Antarctica was even losing ice.
The new research
concludes that Antarctica is melting, but points to the smaller ice
sheet in Greenland, which covers most of the island, as the bigger and
more pressing issue. Its melt rate has grown from about 55 billion tons a
year in the 1990s to almost 290 billion tons a year recently, according
to the study.
"Greenland is really taking off," said National
Snow and Ice Data Center scientist Ted Scambos, a co-author of the paper
released Thursday by the journal Science.
Study lead author
Andrew Shepherd of the University of Leeds in England, said their
results provide a message for negotiators in Doha, Qatar, who are
working on an international agreement to fight global warming: "It's
very clear now that Greenland is a problem."
Scientists blame
man-made global warming for the melting. Burning fossil fuels, such as
coal and oil, emits carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases that trap
heat, warming the atmosphere and oceans. Bit-by-bit, that erodes the ice
sheets from above and below. Snowfall replenishes the ice sheets, but
hasn't kept pace with the rate of melting.
Because the world's
oceans are so big, it takes a lot of ice melting - about 10 trillion
tons - to raise sea levels 1 inch. Since 1992, ice sheets at the poles
have lost nearly 5 trillion tons of ice, the study says, raising sea
levels by about a half inch.
That seemingly tiny extra bit
probably worsened the flooding from an already devastating Superstorm
Sandy last month, said NASA ice scientist Erik Ivins, another co-author
of the study. He said the extra weight gives each wave a little more
energy.
"The more energy there is in a wave, the further the water can get inland," Ivins said.
Globally,
the world's oceans rose about half a foot on average in the 20th
Century. Melting ice sheets accounts for about one-fifth of sea level
rise. Warmer water expands, contributing to the rise along with water
from melting glaciers outside the polar regions.
Just how much ice
is melting at the two poles has been difficult for scientists to
answer. In 2007, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change did not
include ice sheet melt in its calculations of future sea level rise
because numbers were so uncertain.
It's an important factor
because if all the polar ice sheets somehow melted - something that
would take centuries - global sea levels would jump by more than 200
feet, said Pennsylvania State University ice scientist Richard Alley,
who wasn't part of the research.
Some past studies showed melting
on the polar ice sheets, while others said that the Antarctic ice sheet
was growing and offsetting melting in Greenland. The new work by 47
scientists around the world combines three methods and measurements from
10 satellites to come to a scientific consensus on what's happening to
the polar ice sheets.
In the 1990s, the two ice sheets combined on
average lost 110 billion tons of ice each year to melting, the
researchers reported. That increased and by 2005 to 2010, they were
losing three times as much - 379 billion tons yearly. The numbers don't
include the summer of 2012 when Greenland experienced a melt that hadn't
been seen in more than a century, researchers said.
The consensus
says that as a whole the Antarctic ice sheet is melting. Part of the
issue is that the southern continent is not reacting to climate change
uniformly, with some areas growing and others shrinking. The entire
Antarctic ice sheet is about the size of the U.S. and Mexico combined.
NASA chief scientist Waleed Abdalati, one of the few top ice researchers who wasn't part of the study, praised the work.
"Understanding
how and why the ice sheets are changing today better equips us for
understanding and predicting how much and in what ways they will change
in the future," he said.
Associated Press