A high-end sea level rise probabilistic projection including rapid Antarctic ice sheet mass loss
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2017-04-03
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Abstract
The potential for break-up of Antarctic ice shelves by hydrofracturing and following ice cliff instability might be important for future ice dynamics. One recent study suggests that the Antarctic ice sheet could lose a lot more mass during the 21st century than previously thought. This increased mass-loss is found to strongly depend on the emission scenario and thereby on global temperature change. We investigate the impact of this new information on high-end global sea level rise projections by developing a probabilistic process-based method. It is shown that uncertainties in the projections increase when including the temperature dependence of Antarctic mass loss and the uncertainty in the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 5 (CMIP5) model ensemble. Including these new uncertainties we provide probability density functions for the high-end distribution of total global mean sea level in 2100 conditional on emission scenario. These projections provide a probabilistic context to previous extreme sea level scenarios developed for adaptation purposes.
Keywords
sea level rise, antarctica, probabilistic projections, extreme pathways, high-end projections
Citation
Le Bars, D M, Drijfhout, S S & de Vries, H 2017, 'A high-end sea level rise probabilistic projection including rapid Antarctic ice sheet mass loss', Environmental Research Letters, vol. 12, no. 4, 044013. https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/aa6512