Categories: Science

An Arctic ‘beyond recognition’ by 2100


In 2024, annual average global air temperatures surpassed 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels for the first time, triggering extreme weather events like record-breaking rainfall and flooding events in the Sahara Desert and extreme summer heat waves across the planet. However, global warming will not stop at this level. Based on the current pledges of countries for limiting their emissions of greenhouse gases, global temperatures are projected to reach 2.7 degrees Celsius beyond pre-industrial levels by the end of this century. This scenario would dramatically reshape the Arctic, the fastest-warming region of Earth.

A new review paper, published in Science on February 7, 2025, highlights these changes and their far-reaching implications. The paper, “Disappearing landscapes: The Arctic at +2.7°C global warming,” was led byJulienne Stroeve, senior research scientist at the National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC) and professor at the Centre for Earth Observation Science at the University of Manitoba.

“The Arctic is warming at four times the rate of the rest of the planet,” said Stroeve. “At 2.7 degrees Celsius of global warming, we will see more extreme and cascading impacts in this region than elsewhere, including sea-ice-free Arctic summers, accelerated melting of the Greenland Ice Sheet, widespread permafrost loss, and more extreme air temperatures. These changes will devastate infrastructure, ecosystems, vulnerable communities, and wildlife.”

In the review paper, the authors used the Sixth Assessment Report of the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change as a starting point. They updated knowledge from the report about three specific areas of the Arctic environment, including sea ice, the Greenland Ice Sheet and permafrost, focusing on existing studies that show consensus about the changes that will take place in the region.

Under 2.7 degrees Celsius of warming, the Arctic region is likely to experience the following effects:

  • Virtually every day of the year will have air temperatures exceeding pre-industrial temperature extremes.
  • The Arctic Ocean will be free of sea ice for several months each summer.
  • The area of the Greenland Ice Sheet that experiences more than a month of surface temperatures above 0 degrees Celsius will quadruple compared with pre-industrial conditions, causing global sea levels to rise faster.
  • Surface-level permafrost will decrease by 50 percent of pre-industrial levels.

“Our paper shows that, already today, mankind has the power to wipe out entire landscapes from the surface of our planet,” said Dirk Notz, professor for polar research at the University of Hamburg and co-author of the study. “It’d be amazing if we could become more aware of this power and the responsibility that goes with it, as the future of the Arctic truly lies in our hands.”

Other co-authors on the paper included Jackie Dawson of the University of Ottawa, Edward A.G. Schuur of Northern Arizona University, Dorthe Dahl-Jensen of the University of Manitoba and University of Copenhagen, and Céline Giesse of the University of Hamburg. Funding came from several sources, with the largest piece of Stroeve’s funding from the Canada 150 Research Chairs Program, C150 grant 50296. Data and information from NSIDC’s Sea Ice Today and Ice Sheets Today projects were used in the review.



Source link

24timenews.com

Recent Posts

Assi set for digital premiere on ZEE5 on April 17 after theatrical run : Bollywood News

After sparking conversation and earning critical acclaim during its theatrical run, Assi is set for…

5 hours ago

Next-Gen Ford F-150 Confirmed: Debuts By 2029

Ford will launch the next-generation F-150 and Super Duty pickups by 2029.   Ford plans…

6 hours ago

A crushed fossil revealed a dinosaur that shouldn’t have existed

"You want to stick your finger in a dinosaur brain?" asked Simba Srivastava. Inside a…

7 hours ago

2026 VW ID.3 Neo: Specs, Photos, Details

The VW ID.3 Neo brings substantial improvements to the user interface. A new row of…

17 hours ago

Graphene just defied a fundamental law of physics

For decades, physicists have been trying to answer a fundamental question: can electrons move like…

17 hours ago

Read This Performance Driving Guide!

The guide, created by BFGoodrich and Ross Bentley, provides performance-driving coaching at a basic, easily…

1 day ago