Litcius/Paper detail

Greenland ice sheet climate disequilibrium and committed sea-level rise

Jason E. Box, Alun Hubbard, David B. Bahr, William Colgan, Xavier Fettweis, Kenneth D. Mankoff, Adrien Wehrlé, Brice Noël, M. R. van den Broeke, Bert Wouters, Anders Anker Bjørk, Robert S. Fausto

2022Nature Climate Change131 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Ice loss from the Greenland ice sheet is one of the largest sources of contemporary sea-level rise (SLR). While process-based models place timescales on Greenland’s deglaciation, their confidence is obscured by model shortcomings including imprecise atmospheric and oceanic couplings. Here, we present a complementary approach resolving ice sheet disequilibrium with climate constrained by satellite-derived bare-ice extent, tidewater sector ice flow discharge and surface mass balance data. We find that Greenland ice imbalance with the recent (2000–2019) climate commits at least 274 ± 68 mm SLR from 59 ± 15 × 10 3 km 2 ice retreat, equivalent to 3.3 ± 0.9% volume loss, regardless of twenty-first-century climate pathways. This is a result of increasing mass turnover from precipitation, ice flow discharge and meltwater run-off. The high-melt year of 2012 applied in perpetuity yields an ice loss commitment of 782 ± 135 mm SLR, serving as an ominous prognosis for Greenland’s trajectory through a twenty-first century of warming.

Topics & Concepts

DisequilibriumSea level riseGreenland ice sheetIce sheetOceanographyClimatologyFuture sea levelGeologyClimate changeEnvironmental scienceSea iceCryosphereIce shelfOphthalmologyMedicineCryospheric studies and observationsClimate change and permafrostClimate variability and models