logo
Major Ice Sheets May Already Be Past The Point Of No Return: Study

Major Ice Sheets May Already Be Past The Point Of No Return: Study

NDTV21-05-2025

New Delhi:
The Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets are melting fast, and the process may be impossible to stop, a new study has warned. This could lead to several feet of sea level rise and force millions to leave coastal areas. Even if global warming is capped at the 1.5-degree Celsius threshold agreed upon by world leaders, the melting may continue unabated, scientists added.
Published on Tuesday in Nature, the study brings together findings from satellite data, climate models, and paleoclimate records, including ice cores, deep-sea sediments, and even octopus DNA, to determine the "safe limit" of warming for the survival of Earth's largest ice sheets.
The results say that even current warming levels of around 1.2 degree C could set off unstoppable ice sheet retreat. And with the world on track for up to 2.9 degree C of warming by 2100 if emissions continue, the situation could become much worse.
Together, the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets contain enough frozen water to raise global sea levels by approximately 213 feet. While such an outcome is considered extreme, the study says there is a risk of major, multi-foot sea level rise over time. Ice loss from these regions has quadrupled since the 1990s, with around 370 billion tons melting each year, making them the biggest contributors to rising seas. The pace of sea level rise has doubled in the past 30 years.
"You don't slow sea level rise to 1.5, in fact, you see quite a rapid acceleration," Chris Stokes, glaciologist and study co-author from Durham University, told CNN.
Today, about 230 million people live less than one metre (around 3.2 feet) above sea level. The study warns that even small amounts of ice melting could reshape coastlines, force hundreds of millions to move, and cause damage beyond what many places can handle.
By 2100, sea levels could rise by 0.4 inches every year, adding up to around 40 inches over the century.
Scientists say it is hard to know exactly when ice sheets will hit a tipping point, but the danger is closer than they thought. Earlier research suggested the Greenland ice sheet would only start collapsing at around 3 degree C of warming. Now, it may happen at just 1.5 degree C.
To stop this, global warming would need to be kept closer to 1 degree C, which means cutting fossil fuel use sharply. With countries like the US still using oil, coal, and gas, experts say this goal is unlikely.
"There's very little that we are observing that gives us hope here," said Mr Stokes. "The absolute best-case scenario is that sea level rise is slow and steady."
Still, the researchers say that staying as close as possible to the 1.5 degree C target remains vital. "Limiting warming to 1.5 will be a major achievement. It should absolutely be our target, but in no sense will it slow or stop sea level rise and melting ice sheets," Mr Stokes added.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Scientists Smash Nuclear Fusion Record, Igniting Hope For Limitless Clean Energy
Scientists Smash Nuclear Fusion Record, Igniting Hope For Limitless Clean Energy

NDTV

time7 hours ago

  • NDTV

Scientists Smash Nuclear Fusion Record, Igniting Hope For Limitless Clean Energy

Scientists in Germany have taken a giant leap towards producing near-limitless, clean energy using nuclear fusion -- the same fiery reaction that takes place in the core of the Sun. Using the Wendelstein 7-X nuclear fusion reactor, the researchers managed to sustain the fusion experiment for an impressive 43 seconds, smashing the previous records, according to a report in LiveScience. Developing nuclear fusion for energy requirements has long been a goal of scientists but reaching temperatures over 100 million degrees Celsius and sustaining its long-term operation has always proved a challenge. Moreover, current reactor concepts consume more energy than they are able to produce. However, using the machine with extremely low-density and electrically charged hydrogen gas as fuel, scientists managed to achieve the breakthrough. Wendelstein 7-X, officially called a 'stellarator', is a type of fusion device that confines hot, charged gas, known as plasma, with powerful external magnets controlling it. On May 22, plasma inside Wendelstein 7-X was raised to over 20 million Celsius, reaching a peak of 30 million Celsius. It also reached a new record high triple product, a key metric for the success of fusion power generators. The triple product is a combination of the density of particles in the plasma, the temperature required for these particles to fuse, and the energy confinement time. "The new record is a tremendous achievement by the international team. Elevating the triple product to tokamak levels during long plasma pulses marks another important milestone on the way toward a power-plant-capable stellarator," said Thomas Klinger, Head of Operations at Wendelstein 7-X. Notably, the highest values for the triple product were achieved by the Japanese Tokamak JT60U (decommissioned in 2008) and the European Tokamak facility JET in Great Britain (decommissioned in 2023). Holy grail Scientists regard nuclear fusion as the holy grail of energy. It is what powers our Sun as atomic nuclei are merged to create massive amounts of energy, which is the opposite of the fission process used in atomic weapons and nuclear power plants, where the heavy atom is split into multiple smaller ones. Last year, the Experimental Advanced Superconducting Tokamak (EAST) fusion energy reactor, dubbed China's 'artificial sun', sustained plasma for a whopping 1,000 seconds, breaking the 403-second record it set in 2023. Unlike fission, fusion emits no greenhouse gases and carries less risk of accidents or the theft of atomic material. By mimicking the natural reaction of the sun, scientists are hoping that the technology may help harness near-unlimited amounts of energy and help battle the energy crisis, as well as power humanity's exploration beyond the solar system

Magnitude of bridge hits when you see it in real: IISc expert
Magnitude of bridge hits when you see it in real: IISc expert

Indian Express

time16 hours ago

  • Indian Express

Magnitude of bridge hits when you see it in real: IISc expert

They say one cannot erect a great building on a weak foundation. And definitely not, when it's the world's highest railway bridge — now a distinction given to the Chenab Railway Bridge — inaugurated by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Friday. The Chenab bridge remains one of the highest points in the career of Madhavi Latha G, a professor of civil engineering at Indian Institute of Science (IISc), Bengaluru. Latha worked on the project for 17 years — from 2005, shortly after joining IISc, to 2022, when she took her family to the site to have a look at the almost-completed bridge. 'Working on this project has been an experience of a lifetime,' Latha, 54, told The Indian Express. A civil engineering graduate from Jawaharlal Nehru Technological University in Kakinada, Latha went on to pursue her MTech from NIT Warangal and a PhD from IIT Madras, before landing a job as assistant professor at IIT Guwahati in 2003. After a year, she moved to IISc, where she got assigned to this project. The Chenab Railway Bridge is a steel-and-concrete structure extending 1,315 m across the river gorge. It consists of a 530-metre-long approach bridge and a 785-metre-long deck arch bridge (the part on which vehicles ply). The steel structure can endure extreme weather conditions, including temperatures as low as -20 degrees Celsius. It can also withstand wind speed of 220 km/hr, which is equivalent to winds associated with a super cyclone. The region falls under seismic zone IV and the proposed bridge had to have the ability to withstand earthquakes of magnitude up to 8 on the Richter scale. Young mountains with rocky and steep slopes, fractures and joints meant that the civil engineers had to first prepare the ground so that the strong foundation could be laid. 'The region is geotechnically and geologically challenging and close to the boundary where the Himalayas started forming,' Latha said. As the joints were found dipping towards the valley, the possibility of potential rock slides and slope slides were high, so her design was to fix these from sliding. 'Any slope is standing against gravity and it will always be vulnerable to slide off. This is the major instability in such terrains. Mountain formation is an outcome of tectonic activities and since these mountains are still young and continuously evolving, there are inherent discontinuities, joints, separations,' she said, describing the site where the bridge now stands. Stitching together loose rock fragments, fixing slopes into the deep Chenab valley and stabilising the ground in a highly active seismic zone to lay the bridge's foundation was the task at her hand. She was primarily responsible for designing protection for the bridge's foundation. 'While designing, we had to consider the many joints present within the slopes which posed a threat of making the ground unstable, in particular if there was seismic activity. In order to make the bridge quake-resistant, we had to first stabilise these slopes where I was intensely involved,' Madhavi Latha said. 'To stabilise the slope we used cement grouts, so that loose rock fragments, if any, could be bonded together. In addition, we used steel rock anchors to stitch all these joints and connect these fragments,' she explained. Madhavi Latha said at one point her professional skills were required nearly 24×7, giving her no time to rest or sleep. 'At a particular slope cutting, I remember spending sleepless nights as my inputs were required at every stage. Ferrying people and machinery to such altitudes makes the everyday work very expensive,' she said. Her last visit to the site with family in 2022 was a big revelation. 'Images cannot do justice, the magnitude of the bridge hits when one sees it in real,' she said.

Biohazard Hidden In A Tissue, Stashed In A Backpack: How Two Scientists Tried Sneaking The Crop-Killing Fungus Into US
Biohazard Hidden In A Tissue, Stashed In A Backpack: How Two Scientists Tried Sneaking The Crop-Killing Fungus Into US

India.com

time2 days ago

  • India.com

Biohazard Hidden In A Tissue, Stashed In A Backpack: How Two Scientists Tried Sneaking The Crop-Killing Fungus Into US

New Delhi: Two Chinese researchers, Yunqing Jian (33) and Zunyong Liu (34), stand accused of bringing into the United States a deadly agricultural pathogen tucked away inside tissue paper. The fungus, Fusarium graminearum, is a crop-killer that can silently devastate wheat, barley, maize and rice – which are staples of global food security. The mold also carries the terrifying potential to cause vomiting, reproductive defects, liver damage and more in humans and animals. According to an FBI affidavit, when agents tested the smuggled material, they discovered DNA sequences that would allow anyone with biological knowledge to propagate the fungus in a lab. In other words, it was a ticking agroterrorism time bomb. Though the two researchers, believed to be romantically involved, are not charged with trying to weaponise the pathogen, Liu allegedly smuggled it into the United States knowingly and hid it in his backpack. They never even applied for the USDA permit required for importing such biohazards. Now, they are facing a mountain of federal charges – conspiracy, smuggling, false statements and visa fraud. A Silent Killer, a Growing Global Threat Fusarium graminearum is no ordinary fungus. Once it takes hold, it causes Fusarium Head Blight (FHB), also called 'scab'. To the untrained eye, it looks like discolored lesions. But for farmers, it is a nightmare. 'In just a few weeks before harvest, it can destroy an entire field of what once promised a record yield,' CNN has quoted plant pathology expert Gary Bergstrom from Cornell University as saying. The FHB has already inflicted billions of dollars in damage - $2.7 billion to be precise, across the central United States and Northern Plains between 1998 and 2000 alone. And it has not stopped. The fungus survives winters on infected wheat straw and corn stalks, waiting for warm and wet weather to unleash a new wave of spores. Those spores do not only ruin crops, they poison them as well. Grains infected with FHB contain vomitoxin (DON), a powerful mycotoxin linked to gastrointestinal disorders, neuroendocrine damage and even immune suppression in both humans and animals. In livestock, it leads to diarrhea, hemorrhaging and skin issues. And though food processing reduces levels, the United States FDA has strict guidelines to keep DON out of the food chain. How Dangerous Could This Be? Why would someone smuggle a known agricultural biohazard into the United States? Investigators have not found proof of malicious intent, but Liu – despite knowing the USDA restrictions – allegedly brought the fungus anyway. Experts are warning that even unintentional import of a foreign fungal strain could be catastrophic. 'If a new trait enters our environment, like resistance to current fungicides or increased toxin output, it could cripple our defenses,' Bergstrom told CNN. Adding to the fear is the fungus's growing resistance to existing fungicides. Recent studies from Poland confirm that Fusarium graminearum is mutating fast. Traditional methods are faltering, and researchers are scrambling to develop new fungicides and resistant crop strains. As the USDA and federal prosecutors investigate, the world watches closely. Not because two scientists crossed a dangerous line but because the invisible threat they allegedly carried with them could, under the right conditions, ripple through the world's food supply. And it all started with a fungus. Hidden in a tissue. Stashed in a backpack.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store