Publication | Open Access
A 21st Century Warming Threshold for Sustained Greenland Ice Sheet Mass Loss
68
Citations
40
References
2021
Year
GlacierEngineeringClimate ModelingKm ResolutionGlacial ProcessEarth System ScienceEarth ScienceGris SmbClimate ImpactClimate ProjectionGlobal Warming ThresholdClimate ChangeSea-level ChangeGlaciologyGeographyGlobal Warming ModellingGlobal WarmingCryosphereIce LoadEarth's ClimateClimate DynamicsClimatology
Abstract Under anticipated future warming, the Greenland ice sheet (GrIS) will pass a threshold when meltwater runoff exceeds the accumulation of snow, resulting in a negative surface mass balance (SMB < 0) and sustained mass loss. Here, we dynamically and statistically downscale the outputs of an Earth system model to 1 km resolution to infer that a Greenland near‐surface atmospheric warming of 4.5 ± 0.3°C—relative to preindustrial—is required for GrIS SMB to become persistently negative. Climate models from CMIP5 and CMIP6 translate this regional temperature change to a global warming threshold of 2.7 ± 0.2°C. Under a high‐end warming scenario, this threshold may be reached around 2055, while for a strong mitigation scenario it will likely not be passed. Depending on the emissions scenario taken, our method estimates 6–13 cm sea level rise from GrIS SMB by the year 2100.
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