Showing posts with label accelerating melting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label accelerating melting. Show all posts

14 June, 2019

Climate crisis: Alaska is melting and it’s likely to accelerate global heating

A city in western Alaska has lost a huge stretch of riverbank to erosion that may turn it into an island, amid renewed warnings from scientists over the havoc triggered by the accelerating melting of the state’s ice and permafrost.
Rick Knecht, an archeologist, shows a site threatened by climate breakdown erosion caused by melting permafrost on the Yukon Delta in Alaska.
Rick Knecht, an archeologist, shows a site threatened
by climate breakdown erosion caused by melting
permafrost on the Yukon Delta in Alaska.
Residents of the small city of Akiak were alarmed to find the Kuskokwim River suddenly much closer to housing after approximately 75ft to 100ft of riverbank disappeared over the course of just a few hours.
The erosion, which occurred late last month, stripped away the riverbank for the entire length of Akiak, which has a population of around 340.

Read the story from The Guardian by Oliver Milman - “Climate crisis: Alaska is melting and it’s likely to accelerate global heating.”

21 May, 2019

Rise in global sea levels could have 'profound consequences’

Scientists believe that global sea levels could rise far more than predicted, due to accelerating melting in Greenland and Antarctica.
A small boat in the Illulissat Icefjord in western Greenland,
dwarfed by icebergs that have calved from Greenland's largest glacier, 
The long-held view has been that the world's seas would rise by a maximum of just under a metre by 2100.

This new study, based on expert opinions, projects that the real level may be around double that figure.

This could lead to the displacement of hundreds of millions of people, the authors say.
The question of sea-level rise was one of the most controversial issues raised by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), when it published its fifth assessment report in 2013.
Read the BBC story by Matt McGrath - “Rise in global sea levels could have 'profound consequences’.”