Arctic Ice: Why Climate Could Be Lost Already

Video Statistics and Information

Video
Captions Word Cloud
Reddit Comments
Captions
I wish I went to see the Arctic Ocean.  Icy expanses like from another world.   The travel probably costs too much for my tight budget. But the reason I cannot anymore is because   the Arctic Ice could disappear in seven years  from now. This is what a new study warns about   in nature. And this comes as a surprise,  the latest IPCC report planned it to happen   over a large spread of time. The previous IPCC  report even predicted it to happen around 2080,   the earliest. You might think Arctic Ice  disappearing is anecdotal. But actually   it might mean we are losing the battle to climate  change. So what is different in this study ?    What are the impacts of an ice-free Arctic ? And,  what does it mean for the climate battle ? 2030. This year could be the first one to see  a full ice free September in the Arctic. Why   September ? Because this is the end of the  summer the moment the hemisphere reaches its   maximum heat accumulation and the moment when the arctic ice sheets are at their minimum.   To be fair the study I present here today gives  a period rather than a date. In the best case   scenario this would happen around 2050, but in the  worst it could happen before 2030.    It is no secret that the ice sheets already started melting since years. Scientists have been monitoring   the ice caps and warning us about their melting  since 1968. The problem is they melt faster than   all available simulations. So how is this study  different you might say. First it calculates the   real sea ice area using satellite images from 1979  to 2019. This drastically reduces the observed   uncertainty the previous studies had. In the past,  scientists also use satellite images, but they   split them into a grid using a threshold of 15 %  to define whether a grid cell contains ice or not.   Second, this study simulates greenhouse gases  impact on sea ice for all months of the year.   This accounts for the gradual melting when  majority of other studies focused on September   alone. With these data the scientists  can now compare the projections with the   SSP (Shared Socioeconomic Pathways) scenarios  from the IPCC. And no matter how much we reduce   our emissions, the summer ice sheets in the  Arctic could disappear between 2030 and 2050.  Now I know some of you might just  be wondering : Why would ice caps   melting be a bad news for the climate change  ? And, who is this weird accent guy speaking ?   well both are fair and important questions.  To answer both we first need to understand   another Concept in climatology the Tipping Points. Nature is composed of many balanced ecosystems.   Some of these balances are Global and some others Regional. All living organisms are   part of these ecosystems adapted to their  surroundings. Any radical changes to these   balances require adaptation whether  to survive temperatures increase food   supply change or any other disruptions. Earth and life exist since billions of   years. During all this time, these changes forced  adaptation via DNA mutations or in other words,   Natural Evolution. A change in climate does not  mean Earth will die, ecosystems will find New   Balances, whether favorable for existing living  creatures or not if those changes are too harsh,   too abrupt, massive extinctions will  occur, only the fittest survive.  Of course as humans we are different than other  living organisms. We are the only known species   capable to willingly shape its environment. And  the scale of our footprint is gigantic, whether to   serve beliefs or fulfill greed, satisfaction, and  energy desires. But the question is: will we be   able to shape ecosystems with what is happening. In the 2021 report, the IPCC defined a Tipping   Point as a critical threshold Beyond which  a system reorganizes often abruptly and or   irreversibly. But even if this term defines a  change that can be, sudden, it should not be seen   as something happening overnight. It is rather a  profound change taking years. And sometimes these   changes start happening in a sneaky way long  before we discover them or understand them.   So far the scientists identified multiple tipping  elements. You probably heard about the dying low   latitude coral reefs, and the mountain glacier's  loss. Those are the regional ones. But there is   another type of tipping elements: the core Global  ones and their impact is on the entire planet.  Antarctica and Greenland are covered with  kilometers thick ice sheets. The scientists   estimate their melting will happen  around 1.5° increase in Greenland,   and depending on the regions, between 1.5  and 7.5° for Antarctica. This melting will   add millions of tons of fresh water to the ocean  Rising its level by more than 60 meters in total,   causing massive extinctions in marine life, and  more importantly, causing a temperature runaway,   by disrupting Plankton CO2 absorption. Ocean  currents are other Global core tipping element.   For example in the Atlantic Meridional  Overturning Circulation or AMOC,   convection between cold and warm water warms  up the American and European coasts while   tempering low latitude once. The scientists  estimate their Tipping Point at 4° increase.   The fresh water could slow or block these currents  as fresh water remains atop The Salty one. And   by the way there are evidences now that the AMOC  already started weakening. Equatorial rainforests,   another tipping element, are one of the most  important carbon sinks in the planet. It is   expected to reach a point of no return around 3.5°  increase, if deforestation does not destroy it   before of course. And there is still one important  global tipping element which we will see later.  Arctic summer sea ice itself is not a  tipping element. But the winter one is.   Its tipping point was estimated around  6.3°. This study now says that even at   1.8° the scenario where we drastically reduce  our emissions, the Arctic sea ice will start   disappearing soon. It was also interesting  to notice that the whole paper does not even   mention the 1.5° scenario anymore. Without  making any assumptions here, temperatures are   already at 1.15° and multiple scientists already  called the community for stating the obvious.   In any case if these tipping  elements cross the point of no return   they can totally change the face of the  Earth. So how will that impact us humans.  So far only icebreakers were able to navigate  the Arctic Ocean, only in certain areas   and only during certain months of the year. Obviously, strip the ice from it, and the ocean   will become navigable, even for Less equipped  commercial ships. On one hand this could have a   positive effect. Shipping routes will be shorter  reducing emissions by the same. But on the other   hand this is additional risks for the ecosystems  there. Oil leaks, accidents, and adrift containers   could increase in a place where cleaning and  rescue will continue to be harsh. The other effect   here will be the change in geopolitical balances,  especially since the recent events we all know.  From the perspective of climate this could be  very bad. In some areas Arctic Ocean exceeds five   kilometers in depth. Strip the ice from it, and it  will have much lesser Albedo. The more sunlight it   will absorb the warmer it will get. And this can  start a domino effect on the surrounding areas.  First North America Europe and Asia  will lose one of their main stabilizers,   meaning more extreme weather events. Remember  wildfires, summer heat domes and winter cold   snaps ? Well, prepare to see more ! And obviously the second impact will   be more ice melting. Although the speed  will probably depend on our emissions.   Ice melting will add more fresh water in the  ocean. This alone could trigger the ocean current   tipping points and disrupt the Plankton CO2 sinks.  Of course not to mention sea level rise to which   Greenland alone would add an additional 7 meters. And even if the full melting could take centuries   we could start seeing the first impacts in  the next few decades or so. But probably the   biggest impact from Arctic Ocean warming could be  linked to the tipping element I kept for the end.  Around the Arctic Ocean there is a frozen soil  in Canada Europe and Russia, the permafrost.  It already started melting, creating lakes and  collapsing on its own weight. The problem is,   as it melts, it releases carbon trapped since  millennia. The scientists estimate permafrost   melting will release twice as much carbon to  the atmosphere than it (atmosphere) currently   contains. And this is not only CO2  but also methane, which as a reminder,   has up to 30 times more greenhouse effect. If you want to know more about this phenomenon,   watch this video next about permafrost  having probably triggered the   temperature runaway 56 million years ago. Time is running out but there is still hope.   So to answer the remaining questions: Why the  arctic ice melting might mean we are losing the   climate battle ? Well because the next step could  be permafrost melting and a temperature Runaway.  Oh by the way, My name is KHALID and  I talk about interesting science.
Info
Channel: Eruditio Productions
Views: 43,426
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: arctic ice, arctic ice melting, tipping points, tipping elements, climate change, arctic ice 2030, permafrost, sea level rise, amoc, antarctica, greenland, plankton, global warming, warming, climate, heat dome, wild fire, cold snap, temperature runaway, arctic ice 7 years, climate tipping points, climate tipping elements, co2 sink, plankton sink, plankton co2 sink, sea ice
Id: CencDt5_t7A
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 11min 27sec (687 seconds)
Published: Sat Jul 22 2023
Related Videos
Note
Please note that this website is currently a work in progress! Lots of interesting data and statistics to come.