16.2. Key Regional Concerns
This chapter follows the agreed TAR template for WGII regional assessments.
Rather than assessing all possible impacts of climate change, emphasis is placed
on eight key regional concerns. These concerns are chosen for the Arctic and
the Antarctic on the basis of earlier findings by the IPCC (Everett and Fitzharris,
1998) and on discussions at various workshops of the TAR. They represent what
are considered to be the most important impacts of future climate change in
the Arctic and Antarctic in the wider global perspective. Although some other
impacts (e.g., Arctic glaciers and terrestrial Antarctic biota) may be very
important locally, space does not permit a comprehensive review.
16.2.1. Changes in Ice Sheets and Glaciers
Changes in the polar climate will have a direct impact on the great ice sheets,
ice caps, and glaciers of the polar regions. How each responds will depend on
several climatological parameters; some will grow, whereas others shrink. We
have high confidence that their overall contribution to rising sea level will
be positive, with glaciers and the Greenland ice sheet shrinking. The contribution
from Antarctica, however, is uncertain at present. There is a high likelihood
that increasing temperatures over the continent and changing storm tracks will
cause increased precipitation and thickening of the ice sheet, but there still
exists at low confidence the possibility that the West Antarctic ice sheet will
retreat dramatically in coming centuries (Vaughan and Spouge, 2000). Such a
change would not result from recent and future climate change (Bentley, 1998)
but more probably from continuing readjustment to the end of the last glacial
period (Bindschadler, 1998), as a result of internal dynamics of the ice sheet
(MacAyeal, 1992), or as a result of ice shelf-ocean interaction. This subject
and the general issue of sea-level rise are reviewed more comprehensively in
TAR WGI Chapter 11; we include only
a summary of the main points here.
The Greenland ice sheet suffers melting in summer at its margin. There is a
trend toward an increase in the area and duration of this melt (Abdalati and
Steffen, 1997). This trend is likely to continue. Airborne altimetric monitoring
has shown that over the period 1993-1998, the Greenland ice sheet was slowly
thickening at higher elevations; at lower elevations, thinning (about 1 m yr-1)
was underway (Krabill et al., 1999, 2000). If warming continues, the
Greenland ice sheet will shrink considerably, as occurred in previous interglacial
periods (Cuffey and Marshall, 2000), and if the warming is sustained, the ice
sheet will melt completely (see TAR WGI Chapter
11).
Over the Antarctic ice sheet, where only a few limited areas show summer melting
(Zwally and Fiegles, 1994), a slight thickening is likely as precipitation rates
increase (e.g., Ohmura et al., 1996; Smith et al., 1998a; Vaughan
et al., 1999). In the past decade there has been some change in the ice
cover in local areas (e.g., on the Antarctic Peninsula; see Section
16.2.2), but the majority of the Antarctic ice sheet appears, from satellite
altimetry, to be close to a state of balance (Wingham et al., 1998).
Only the Thwaites and Pine Island glacier basins show any spatially coherent
trend, but it is not yet known if their thinning is related to a decrease in
precipitation or some dynamic change in the ice sheet. Chinn (1998) reports
that recession is the dominant change trend of recent decades for glaciers of
the Dry Valleys area of Antarctica. The future of glaciers in the Arctic will
be primarily one of shrinkage, although it is possible that in a few cases they
will grow as a result of increased precipitation.
This report is concerned primarily with the impacts of climate change on particular
regions. An important question is: How will changes in glacial ice in the polar
regions impact local human populations and ecological systems, and what will
be the socioeconomic consequences? The short answer is that impacts on ice systems
will be substantial, but because the populations of humans and other biota within
polar region are low, impacts may be relatively minor. In Antarctica, the continental
human population is only a few thousand. A few localities may undergo changes
such as that at Stonington Island on the Antarctic Peninsula (Splettoesser,
1992), where retreat of the ice sheet has left the station stranded on an island.
In general, however, changes to ice sheets will directly cause few significant
life-threatening problems.
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