New predictions show Antarctica's ice sheets could melt far sooner than expected
Experts have underestimated how bad the impact of climate change will be.
Image: REUTERS/Pauline Askin
Stay up to date:
Antarctica
- New predictions by the journal Climate Dynamics have found that sea levels may rise far sooner than expected.
- With these rising levels, we can expect devastating storms and global temperatures rising even faster because there’s less ice to reflect heat.
- It's suggested that experts have been underestimating how bad the impacts of climate change might be, not accounting for extreme weather events.
As rising global temperatures continue to melt the ice in Antarctica, scientists predict that we’ll face serious problems in the coming decades — from rising sea levels to devastating storms to temperatures rising even faster because there’s less ice to reflect heat.
Now, it turns out all those problems could be even worse than scientists predicted, according to research published in the journal Climate Dynamics. Existing models tended to predict ice melt based on average conditions over time, but accounting for fluctuating extremes paints a far more dire picture.
Accelerated timeline
Climate models need to represent how chaotic weather patterns can be, study author and Penn State climate researcher Chris Forest argued in a press release. Accounting for those fluctuations, Forest’s work shows that the Antarctic ice sheet could retreat 20 years sooner than expected.
Factoring that in, the melting ice could raise the sea level by an additional 2.7 to 4.3 inches on top of the 10.6 to 14.9 inches that simpler models predict by the year 2100.
“We know ice sheets are melting as global temperatures increase, but uncertainties remain about how much and how fast that will happen,” Forest said in the release.
Storm surge
That suggests that experts have been underestimating how bad the impacts of climate change might be, meaning they may have to change course.
“This additional ice melt will impact the hurricane storm surges across the globe,” Forest said. “It’s important to better understand these processes contributing to the additional ice loss because the ice sheets are melting much faster than we expected.”
Accept our marketing cookies to access this content.
These cookies are currently disabled in your browser.
Accept our marketing cookies to access this content.
These cookies are currently disabled in your browser.
Accept our marketing cookies to access this content.
These cookies are currently disabled in your browser.
Don't miss any update on this topic
Create a free account and access your personalized content collection with our latest publications and analyses.
License and Republishing
World Economic Forum articles may be republished in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International Public License, and in accordance with our Terms of Use.
The views expressed in this article are those of the author alone and not the World Economic Forum.
Related topics:
Forum Stories newsletter
Bringing you weekly curated insights and analysis on the global issues that matter.
More on Climate ActionSee all
Gareth Francis
February 28, 2025
David Elliott
February 26, 2025
Tom Crowfoot
February 25, 2025
Berry Kennedy
February 25, 2025