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Writer's pictureThomas Neuburger

Collapse of the Thwaites Glacier Has Accelerated



By Thomas Neuburger


The Thwaites Glacier, a Florida-sized mass of ice at the coast of Western Antarctica, has been called the “doomsday glacier” because of its potential to wreak havoc all by itself.


For example, consider its size:


This Vox video from 2020 gives a good, if too-calming view of the process by which Thwaites has been disappearing for decades.




Jump to the 2:29 minute mark to see a visualization of the undercutting in action.



“How soon that happens is hotly debated” says the narrator at 3:33. That was true in 2020. Not so much anymore.


‘It will take decades, not centuries’


From CNN on May 21 (via the excellent climate news aggregator, The Collapse Chronicle):

Ocean water is rushing miles underneath the ‘Doomsday Glacier’ with potentially dire impacts on sea level rise …Thwaites, which already contributes 4% to global sea level rise, holds enough ice to raise sea levels by more than 2 feet. But because it also acts as a natural dam to the surrounding ice in West Antarctica, scientists have estimated its complete collapse could ultimately lead to around 10 feet of sea level rise — a catastrophe for the world’s coastal communities. Many studies have pointed to the immense vulnerabilities of Thwaites. Global warming, driven by humans burning fossil fuels, has left it hanging on “by its fingernails,” according to a 2022 study.

CNN doesn’t link to the study. The UC Irvine announcement is here. The paper itself is here.


The lead author, Eric Rignot, has been quoted as saying, “The projections will go up … [The collapse] will take many decades, not centuries. Part of the answer also depends on whether our climate keeps getting warmer or not”.


Needless to say, the climate keeps getting warmer. And don’t trust the word “many.” He’s trying not to scare you too much.


Our Bet with the Future


No one says this will happen immediately. “Decades” are still not next year. But global sea surface temperatures are setting new records, and at an accelerating pace.


As you can imagine, there’s a certain freaking out caused by this, more so from scientists (see also here and here) than from those who owe their lives to the moneyed class.


In how “many decades” could this all occur? My money’s on two or three, by the mid-2050s.


Global Sea Level Rise vs. Sea Levels Near You


But whatever the time scale for Thwaites’ complete collapse, the change it will bring won’t be smooth, but sudden, in stages. If a Florida-sized chunk of ice that’s not submerged, suddenly falls into the sea, it will raise sea level globally — on its own — by as much as two feet.


And that rise won’t be well distributed. The sea near New York, for example, will rise 1½ times the global average:



The Thwaites collapse, when it comes, will change everything. And the Western Antarctic collapse, following that, will ice the rest of the cake. The first could come in the next twenty years or so — remember, everything’s accelerating.

And the second … well, when that arrives may not matter at all, given how scrambled our eggs will be by then.


The Solution


The solution, of course, is action of a “vigorous” kind. The State knows this far better than most. That’s why it’s been gearing up. We’ll look at that soon.

1 Comment


Guest
May 28

Every projection up to now has been low. Acceleration will get moreso because of resonance. The same is true for glaciers on Greenland and the Hindu-Kush.


And the dumber than shits in this shithole and pretty much everywhere just refuse to do jack shit.


And, like I keep pointing out, even if humans stopped burning shit for energy this afternoon, temps and C would keep rising simply because of resonance in the system. The acceleration may cease in a few years, but the stasis will still be a steady increase in temps and C for centuries, until some process impedes it (like massive volcanic eruptions or nuclear winter).


Thanks to Thomas for trying. Sorry it is for naught.

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