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Future projections for the Antarctic ice sheet until the year 2300 with a climate-index method

Ralf Greve, Christopher Chambers, Takashi Obase, Fuyuki Saito, Wing‐Le Chan, Ayako Abe‐Ouchi

2023Journal of Glaciology16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract As part of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 6 (CMIP6), the Ice Sheet Model Intercomparison Project for CMIP6 (ISMIP6) was devised to assess the likely sea-level-rise contribution from the Earth's ice sheets. Here, we construct an ensemble of climate forcings for Antarctica until the year 2300 based on original ISMIP6 forcings until 2100, combined with climate indices from simulations with the MIROC4m climate model until 2300. We then use these forcings to run simulations for the Antarctic ice sheet with the SICOPOLIS model. For the unabated warming pathway RCP8.5/SSP5-8.5, the ice sheet suffers a severe mass loss, amounting to ~ 1.5 m SLE (sea-level equivalent) for the fourteen-experiment mean, and ~ 3.3 m SLE for the most sensitive experiment. Most of this loss originates from West Antarctica. For the reduced emissions pathway RCP2.6/SSP1-2.6, the loss is limited to a three-experiment mean of ~ 0.16 m SLE. The means are approximately two times larger than what was found in a previous study (Chambers and others, 2022, doi:10.1017/jog.2021.124) that assumed a sustained late-21st-century climate beyond 2100, demonstrating the importance of post-2100 climate trends on Antarctic mass changes in the 22nd and 23rd centuries.

Topics & Concepts

Coupled model intercomparison projectClimatologyIce sheetAntarctic ice sheetClimate modelFuture sea levelClimate changeGeologyCryosphereRepresentative Concentration PathwaysIce-sheet modelSea levelEnvironmental scienceSea iceAtmospheric sciencesOceanographyIce shelfCryospheric studies and observationsClimate variability and modelsClimate change and permafrost
Future projections for the Antarctic ice sheet until the year 2300 with a climate-index method | Litcius