File:Antarctic ice losses -- slow onset, high impacts.jpg

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Antarctic_ice_losses_--_slow_onset,_high_impacts.jpg(634 × 549 pixels, file size: 162 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg)


Presentation from Dr. Chris Stokes to the International Cryosphere Climate Initiative


Tipping Points Well Below 1.5°C for Ice Sheets and Glaciers


Dr. Stokes: One time accumulation events in East Antarctica have not slowed total mass losses of ice in the East & West Antarctic…


Via greenman3610 on June 26, 2025

Senior IPCC authors presents strong evidence that the Paris Agreement’s lower temperature limit of 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels is too high to prevent significant sea-level rise from Antarctica and Greenland.


Even current warming levels at 1.2°C, if sustained, will likely lead to several meters of sea-level rise over coming centuries, resulting in extensive loss and damage to coastal populations and challenging the implementation of adaptation measures.

Currently, around 230 million people live within just one meter of sea level; melting ice represents an existential threat to those communities as well as several low-lying nations. To avoid this future, global mean temperature must return closer to 1°C or below as soon as possible through strong an immediate cuts in greenhouse gas pollution to prevent (in IPCC terminology) “slow-onset, high-impact” losses from both polar ice sheets.


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Cumulative ice loss in East & West Antarctic-1990-2025.jpg


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