“If global ice masses shrink, this changes how much of the sunlight that hits the Earth’s surface is reflected back into space. Decreasing ice cover in the Arctic exposes more of the darker ocean water that absorbs more energy,” says Nico Wunderling, lead author of the study. “This is referred to as albedo feedback. It’s like wearing white or black clothes in summer. If you wear dark, you heat up more easily.” Further factors include for instance the increase of water vapour in the atmosphere due to the warming if more ice is melting. Warmer air can hold more water vapour, and water vapour increases the greenhouse effect.
The basic mechanisms are well-known since long, but the Potsdam scientists were able to actually calculate the overall amount of warming that can be triggered by global ice loss.
“This is not a short-term risk. Yet every tenth of a degree counts.”
“This is not a short-term risk. The Earth’s ice masses are huge, which makes them very important for our Earth system as a whole – it also means that their response to anthropogenic climate change, especially that of the ice sheets on Greenland and Antarctica, unfolds on longer timescales. But even if some of the changes might take hundreds or thousands of years to manifest, it’s possible we trigger them within just a couple of decades,” says Ricarda Winkelmann who leads the research group.
The scientists did comprehensive computer simulations. The effects are not always straightforward: for instance, if a massive ice cover on land is shrinking, there can still be snow – which still reflects the sunlight, just like the ice did. This is why, if the mountain glaciers and the ice on Greenland and West Antarctica would all disappear, the additional warming directly caused by the ice loss would likely be just an additional 0.2 degrees on top of the 0.2 degrees due to Arctic summer sea-ice melting.
“Yet every tenth of a degree of warming counts for our climate,” says Winkelmann. “Preventing Earth system feedback loops, or vicious circles, is thus more urgent than ever.”
Article
Nico Wunderling, Matteo Willeit, Jonathan F. Donges, Ricarda Winkelmann (2020): Global warming due to loss of large ice masses and Arctic summer sea ice. Nature Communications [DOI:10.1038/s41467-020-18934-3]
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