Department of Geography, King's College London, London, UK.
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD, USA.
Nature. 2021 May;593(7857):74-82. doi: 10.1038/s41586-021-03302-y. Epub 2021 May 5.
The land ice contribution to global mean sea level rise has not yet been predicted using ice sheet and glacier models for the latest set of socio-economic scenarios, nor using coordinated exploration of uncertainties arising from the various computer models involved. Two recent international projects generated a large suite of projections using multiple models, but primarily used previous-generation scenarios and climate models, and could not fully explore known uncertainties. Here we estimate probability distributions for these projections under the new scenarios using statistical emulation of the ice sheet and glacier models. We find that limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius would halve the land ice contribution to twenty-first-century sea level rise, relative to current emissions pledges. The median decreases from 25 to 13 centimetres sea level equivalent (SLE) by 2100, with glaciers responsible for half the sea level contribution. The projected Antarctic contribution does not show a clear response to the emissions scenario, owing to uncertainties in the competing processes of increasing ice loss and snowfall accumulation in a warming climate. However, under risk-averse (pessimistic) assumptions, Antarctic ice loss could be five times higher, increasing the median land ice contribution to 42 centimetres SLE under current policies and pledges, with the 95th percentile projection exceeding half a metre even under 1.5 degrees Celsius warming. This would severely limit the possibility of mitigating future coastal flooding. Given this large range (between 13 centimetres SLE using the main projections under 1.5 degrees Celsius warming and 42 centimetres SLE using risk-averse projections under current pledges), adaptation planning for twenty-first-century sea level rise must account for a factor-of-three uncertainty in the land ice contribution until climate policies and the Antarctic response are further constrained.
陆地冰对全球平均海平面上升的贡献尚未根据最新的社会经济情景的冰盖和冰川模型进行预测,也没有利用对各种相关计算机模型不确定性的协同探索进行预测。最近的两个国际项目利用多个模型生成了大量预测结果,但主要使用了前几代的情景和气候模型,无法充分探索已知的不确定性。在这里,我们利用冰盖和冰川模型的统计仿真,根据新情景来估计这些预测的概率分布。我们发现,将全球变暖限制在 1.5 摄氏度以内,将使 21 世纪海平面上升的陆地冰贡献减少一半,与目前的排放承诺相比。到 2100 年,海平面将相应降低 25 至 13 厘米,其中冰川对海平面上升的贡献占一半。由于气候变暖过程中冰流失增加和降雪量增加的竞争过程存在不确定性,预计南极的海平面上升贡献对排放情景没有明显的响应。然而,在风险厌恶(悲观)假设下,南极冰流失可能会增加五倍,使目前政策和承诺下的陆地冰海平面上升贡献中位数达到 42 厘米 SLE,95%预测值甚至在 1.5 摄氏度升温下超过半米。这将严重限制未来沿海洪灾的缓解可能性。鉴于这种大范围的不确定性(在 1.5 摄氏度升温下主要预测的海平面上升贡献为 13 厘米 SLE 与在当前承诺下风险厌恶预测的海平面上升贡献为 42 厘米 SLE 之间),在气候政策和南极响应得到进一步限制之前,21 世纪海平面上升的适应规划必须考虑陆地冰贡献的三倍不确定性因素。