What Happens In Antarctica, Doesn’t Stay In Antarctica

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The Quito Glacier is seen melting near Ecuador's Pedro Vicente Maldonado Research Station on Greenwich Island, Antarctica, in February 2019. Photographer: Isadora Romero/Bloomberg

We hear a lot about climate wake-up calls. Here's one you would do well not to ignore: Antarctica had the most extreme heatwave ever recorded.

In March 2022, east Antarctica saw temperatures of up to 38.5C (101.3F) higher than average for the time of year. A so-called “atmospheric river” brought warm air and moisture from Australia into the heart of the frozen continent, raising temperatures to -10C from the norm of -50C. Had the UK's 2022 heatwave — which saw the nation exceed 40C for the first time — been that severe, we would have hit 60C.

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It's just one of many extreme events brought together in a new report published in the journal Frontiers in Environmental Science. What Antarctica's future looks like is uncertain, but one sure thing is that continued fossil-fuel burning puts the world's southernmost continent at increased risk of catastrophic cascades. The extreme heat in 2022, for instance, led to surface warming of land ice, the breaking up of sea-ice and the subsequent collapse of the Conger Ice Shelf – a frozen platform the size of Rome.

Other events noted include record low sea ice levels, marine heatwaves and unprecedented surface melting. In terms of sea ice extent, this year has been particularly unusual. July's sea-ice levels were three times further from the average than what had ever been seen previously. These events are detrimental to Antarctica's iconic wildlife: Between 2018 and 2022, 42% of emperor penguin colonies likely experienced total or partial breeding failure due to fast ice breakup in at least one year.

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These are arguably climate-related tipping points — when something goes beyond the point of no return — already happening in the South Pole. When we see large icebergs shear off from the continent, large ice shelves collapsing and sea ice area reducing, what might not be appreciated is that these things cannot easily be fixed, if at all. Anna Hogg, co-author and associate professor in the School of Earth and Environment at the University of Leeds, says that we've never seen an ice shelf recover in our lifetimes.

Irreparable losses in one of the most precious and unique areas on Earth are devastating and an ugly legacy for mankind's actions. That's reason enough to prevent further degradation where possible. But there's another reason to worry. As Jane Rumble, co-author from the study and head of the Polar Regions Department for the UK's Foreign and Commonwealth Office, told journalists before the report's release “What happens in Antarctica, does not stay in Antarctica. It has global consequences.”

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Take sea levels, for example. Today, thanks to fossil-fuel burning, the Antarctic ice sheet contributes six times more mass to the ocean than it did three decades ago. The reservoir of ice on Antarctica's ice sheet is vast – if it were to melt completely, which scientists don't expect will happen anytime soon, it would raise global sea levels by 57 meters on average. Unlike the glaciers that would melt and then stop contributing to sea level rise, Antarctica would keep going and going — posing challenges that may be existential for some low-lying regions and coastal population centers, from Jakarta to Miami. 

The other fear is that Antarctica stops being our planet's refrigerator and starts acting more like a radiator. At the moment, Antarctica's ice reflects a large amount of solar radiation back into space, helping keep the world cool.

Only 0.2-0.4% of the continent is exposed above the ice at the moment, but that proportion is likely to increase with further warming. That reduces the albedo – or reflectivity – of the surface and increases the heat absorbed by the planet. It's an effect we're already seeing in the Arctic, which is now warming four times faster than the rest of the planet. If Antarctica starts acting like the Arctic, that would have grave consequences for everywhere else.

It might be many thousands of miles away, but you can bet that we'll all feel the effects of a changing Antarctica. Just one more reason to add to the library of justifications for rapid and bold climate action. 

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More From Bloomberg Opinion:

  • Earth's Climate Tipping Point Could Come in the 2030s: F.D. Flam
  • A 36-Year-Old Treaty Is Slowing the Arctic Melt: David Fickling
  • Rising Seas Are Next Crisis for World's Ports: Francis Wikinson

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.

Lara Williams is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering climate change.

More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com/opinion

©2023 Bloomberg L.P.

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