Hurrah, Danish government is about to decide I'll get my pension when I'm 71. 🤨
25 years to go....
Maybe we'll actually have solved climate change and sea level rise by then 🤔
Hurrah, Danish government is about to decide I'll get my pension when I'm 71. 🤨
25 years to go....
Maybe we'll actually have solved climate change and sea level rise by then 🤔
#SeaLevelRise #TippingPoints
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Hm, 25 years...we all know that #ClimateChange is probably even accelerating. +1.5°C has really been a "pie in the sky, and "only" +2° are becoming less likely by the day.
A study by #YixiZheng, an oceanographer at the University of East Anglia about the #ThwaitesGlacier in #WestAntarcticanicknamed the “#DoomsdayGlacier”—has shown that it's collapse would lead to sea level rise of 10 ft/3m. 1)
I guess you are one of the best persons to ask:
#SeaLevelRise #TippingPoints
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Will the retirement age even matter? How many people of #Denmark would be affected by a 3m rise? Would the billions needed for flood "control" not wrack the #Dutch budget and thus the state pension system, among other things. What percentage of the population would become #ClimateRefugees?
Recently, I saw an article about how many additional meters of sea level rise are saved in ice 🧊 and that we still don't know enough about tipping...
@HistoPol this is probably the best and most recent reference for the importance of different scenarios of #SeaLevelRise in #Antarctica, and the long tail of the different emissions pathways - the sea will rise for centuries.
I will not live to see it.
Abstract. The evolution of the Antarctic Ice Sheet is of vital importance given the coastal and societal implications of ice loss, with a potential to raise sea level by up to 58 m if melted entirely. However, future ice-sheet trajectories remain highly uncertain. One of the main sources of uncertainty is related to nonlinear processes and feedbacks of the ice sheet with the Earth System on different timescales. Due to these feedbacks and the ice-sheet inertia, ice loss may already be triggered in the next decades and then unfolds delayed on multi-centennial to millennial timescales. This committed Antarctic sea-level contribution is not reflected in typical sea-level projections based on mass balance changes of Antarctica, which often cover decadal-to-centennial timescales. Here, using two ice-sheet models, we systematically assess the multi-millennial sea-level commitment from Antarctica in response to warming projected over the next centuries under low- and high-emission pathways. This allows bringing together the time horizon of stakeholder planning with the much longer response times of the Antarctic Ice Sheet. Our results show that warming levels representative of the lower-emission pathway SSP1-2.6 may already result in an Antarctic mass loss of up to 6 m sea-level equivalent on multi-millennial timescales. This committed mass loss is due to a strong grounding-line retreat in the Amundsen Sea Embayment as well as a potential drainage from the Ross Ice Shelf catchment and onset of ice loss in Wilkes subglacial basin. Beyond warming levels reached by the end of this century under the higher-emission trajectory SSP5-8.5, a collapse of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet is triggered in the entire ensemble of simulations from both ice-sheet models. Under enhanced warming, next to the marine parts, we also find a substantial decline in ice volume of regions grounded above sea level in East Antarctica. Over the next millennia, this gives rise to a sea-level increase of up to 40 m in our experiments, stressing the importance of including the committed Antarctic sea-level contribution in future projections.
#SeaLevelRise #ForestFires #TippingPoints
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Thank you, Ruth.
I will read it.
From all I have been reading, my aggregate "gut feeling" is that we still underestimate the rate of #ClimateChange, as well as the interconnectedness of #TriggerPoints:
“Triggering one tipping point 👉could trigger another in a kind of dangerous domino effect👈,” says #TimLenton at the #UniversityOfExeter in the #UK, the report’s lead author.
“But also 👉these tipping points in the Earth...
#SeaLevelRise #ForestFires #TippingPoints
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...system could, in turn, trigger damaging tipping points in societies,👈 things like food security crises, mass displacement [#ClimateRefugees]..." 1)
Another issue is that we probably are missing other trigger points.
I'm not sure if it's already listed as such, but in the last week, I read an article that the increasing...
#SeaLevelRise #ForestFires #TippingPoints
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...seriousness and frequency of #ForestFires excercabate the likelihood of even more fires in the future, another #ViciousCircle.
Also, just looking at #Germany's forests, the vast majority consists of sick trees 2), prone to insects and fires.
Last but not least, some global regions sit on huge, unstoppable tinder boxes due to coal. 3)
2)
https://mastodon.social/@HistoPol/110123013587695020