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Planning for rapid and irreversible change in the future: CPOM awarded funding to investigate critical climate tipping points in Antarctica

17th December 2024

The UK Centre for Polar Observation and Modelling (CPOM) has been awarded over £400,000 by the European Space Agency (ESA) to investigate tipping points in the Earth’s icy regions (the cryosphere), with a focus on the Antarctic.

Climate tipping points are critical thresholds that if crossed, can lead to rapid and irreversible changes in the climate system with dramatic consequences for our society. Crossing these points in the cryosphere has the potential to lead to much faster sea level rise as well as trigger other tipping points in the climate system, therefore it is of vital importance that scientists assess and attempt to understand where and when these tipping points might be crossed. This knowledge will help governments better prepare for the consequences of climate warming.

CPOM Co-Director for Science, Dr Inès Otosaka (Northumbria University) will be leading the ‘CryoTipping’ project with a team of Earth Observation experts from ESA’s Antarctic CCI+ Project and ice sheet modelling experts from Northumbria’s Future of Ice on Earth Peak of Research Excellence.

The research will build on datasets developed by ESA’s Antarctic CCI+ Project, and will combine Earth Observation and numerical modelling to detect marine ice sheet instability in the Amundsen Sea Sector, with a focus on Thwaites glacier.

Dr Otosaka said:

“Satellite observations have shown that the ice sheets have been melting more rapidly than previously thought whilst numerical models have demonstrated their sensitivity to future changes in their surrounding atmosphere and ocean. By combining state-of-the-art satellite observations and numerical modelling techniques, this exciting project will further our understanding of the trigger of instability mechanisms in Antarctica.”

Exploring the potential of using satellite data to detect early warning signs of marine ice sheet instability, the CryoTipping project will be the first to contrast present-day retreat rates of the Thwaites glacier measured from satellite data against those modelled over the past 20,000 years.

Dr Anna Maria Trofaier, Cryosphere Scientist at ESA (European Space Agency) said:

“That Thwaites Glacier is extremely vulnerable to climate change is known. The worry is that ongoing changes could result in a switch to a new state of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet with crucial consequences for sea level rise. If we want to understand the state of this tipping element we need to combine models with observations, and the European Space Agency’s satellite Earth Observation data are ideally placed to support this new project and its important work.”

The team aims to develop a new method to detect these tipping points by feeding satellite observations of grounding line location (where glaciers and ice shelves start to float), ice velocity, and surface elevation changes to an ice sheet model, investigating the onset and potential irreversibility of the retreat of Thwaites glacier over the coming centuries.

The project, funded by ESA and due to commence in early 2025, is led by CPOM (based at Northumbria University), in partnership with ice sheet modelling experts from Northumbria’s Future of Ice on Earth Peak of Research Excellence, PIK (Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research) and MPI-GEA (Max Planck Institute of Geoanthropology), and Earth Observation experts from ENVEO IT GmbH and DLR German Aerospace Center.

CPOM is a partnership of six universities and the British Antarctic Survey (BAS), based at Northumbria University, primarily funded by the National Environment Research Council (NERC) to provide national capability in observation and modelling of the processes that occur in the Polar regions of the Earth.

CPOM uses satellite observations to monitor change in the Polar regions and numerical models to better predict how their ice and oceans might evolve in the future. By providing long-term capabilities to the scientific community and leading international assessments, CPOM helps global policymakers plan for the effects of climate change and sea level rise.

Image credit: Andrew Shepherd

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