New Delhi (NVI): Greenland ice sheet is losing 25 billion tons of ice per year, according to a study, with researchers warning that if this rate continues, the global sea level will rise approximately 3 to 5 inches by 2100.
Greenland lost a whopping 3.8 trillion tonnes of ice between 1992 and 2018, leading to a rise in global sea levels by 10.6 millimeters, according to the study, during which 89 polar scientists from 50 scientific institutions assessed the current rate of ice loss by combining 26 satellite data sets from 1992 through 2018.
The study to track global warming’s effects on Greenland also measured changes in the Greenland ice sheet’s volume, flow and gravitational potential.
This means that Greenland’s current rate of ice loss has accelerated from 25 billion to 234 billion tons per year, a whopping nine times increase in faster melt rate.
Warmer air at the surface of the ice sheet is responsible for about half of the ice that Greenland is losing each year.
Warmer ocean temperatures around Greenland’s coastline, icebergs calving into the ocean and the ice sheet shedding ice into the ocean more quickly accounts for the other half of the ice loss.
For perspective, 3.8 trillion tons of ice melting off of Greenland and into the ocean between 1992 and 2018 is the same as adding the water from 120 million Olympic-size swimming pools to the ocean every year, for 26 years.
This extra water is enough to cause at least 0.4 inches of sea level rise just from Greenland alone.
Even a small bit of sea level rise exacerbates the impacts of flooding during storm surges, high tides and hurricanes and exposes more and more people around the globe to increased flooding.
The findings in this study are consistent with the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s worst-case climate warming projections.