Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets are melting fast, driving sea level rise: satellite data
CTV
The Earth's ice sheets lost enough ice over the last 30 years to create an ice cube 12 miles high, according to new research. The Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets, which hold almost all of the world's freshwater ice, are shrinking at a frighteningly rapid pace, according to a report on Thursday from a team of international scientists.
The Earth's ice sheets lost enough ice over the last 30 years to create an ice cube 12 miles high, according to new research.
The Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets, which hold almost all of the world's freshwater ice, are shrinking at a frighteningly rapid pace, according to a report on Thursday from a team of international scientists.
Combining data from 50 satellite surveys of Antarctica and Greenland, spanning the years 1992 to 2020, scientists from the Ice Sheet Mass Balance Inter-comparison Exercise, or IMBIE, were able to track changes in the ice sheets' volume and ice flow.
They found that ice sheet melting has increased six-fold over the past 30 years, as record levels of planet-heating pollution push up global temperatures.
The seven worst years for polar ice sheet melting all happened during the past decade.
In all, the polar ice sheets lost more than 8.3 trillion tons of ice between 1992 and 2020, according to the report.
The worst year for ice sheet loss was 2019, the report found, when the ice sheets lost around 675 billion tons of ice. These losses were driven by an Arctic heatwave, which saw Greenland's ice sheet shed 489 billion tons.