
Friday » February 9 » 2007
Polar scientists on
thin ice
The Deniers -- Part IV
Lawrence
Solomon
Financial Post
Friday, February 02, 2007
December 15, 2006
A great melt is on in Antarctica. Its northern
peninsula -- a jut of land extending to about 1,200 kilometres from Chile -- has
seen a drastic increase in temperature, a thinning of ice sheets and, most
alarmingly, a collapse of ice shelves. The Larsen A ice shelf, 1,600 square
kilometres in size, fell off in 1995. The Wilkins ice shelf, 1,100 square
kilometres, fell off in 1998 and the Larsen B, 13,500 square kilometres,
dropped off in 2002. Meanwhile, the northern Antarctic
Peninsula's temperatures have soared by six degrees celsius in the
last 50 years.
Antarctica represents the greatest threat to
the globe from global warming, bar none. If Antarctica's
ice melts, the world's oceans will rise, flooding low-lying lands where much of
the world's population lives. Not only would their mass migration spawn
hardships for the individual families retreating from the rising waters, the
world would also be losing fertile deltas that feed tens of millions of people.
This chilling scenario understandably sends shudders through concerned citizens
around the world, and steels the resolve of those determined to stop the
cataclysm of global warming.
But much confounding evidence exists. As one example, at the South Pole, where
the U.S.
decades ago established a station, temperatures have actually fallen since
1957. Neither is Antarctica's advance or retreat a new question raised by the
spectre of global warming: This is the oldest scientific question of all about
the Antarctic ice sheet.
Enter Duncan Wingham, Professor of Climate Physics at University
College London and Director of the Centre for Polar
Observation and Modelling. Dr. Wingham has been pursuing this polar puzzle for
much of his professional life and, but for an accident in space, he might have
had the answer at hand by now.
Dr. Wingham is Principal Scientist of the European Space Agency's CryoSat
Satellite Mission, a $130-million project designed to map changes in the depth
of ice using ultra-precise instrumentation. Sadly for Dr. Wingham and for
science as a whole, CryoSat fell into the Arctic Ocean
after its launch in October, 2005, when a rocket launcher malfunctioned. Dr
Wingham will now need to wait until 2009 before CryoSat-2, CryoSat's even more
precise successor, can launch and begin relaying the data that should conclusively
determine whether Antarctica's ice sheets are thinning or not. Apart from
satellite technology, no known way exists to reliably determine changes in mass
over a vast and essentially unexplorable continent covered in ice several
kilometres thick.
But CryoSat was not the only satellite available to polar scientists. Dr.
Wingham has been collecting satellite data for years, and arriving at startling
conclusions. Early last year at a European Union Space Conference in Brussels, for example, Dr. Wingham revealed that data from
a European Space Agency satellite showed Antarctic thinning was no more common
than thickening, and concluded that the spectacular collapse of the ice shelves
on the Antarctic Peninsula was much more
likely to have followed natural current fluctuations than global warming.
"The Antarctic Peninsula is exceptional
because it juts out so far north," Dr. Wingham told the press at the time.
As well, scientists have been drawn to the peninsula because it is relatively
accessible and its climate is moderate, allowing it to be more easily studied
than the harsh interior of the continent. Because many scientists have been
preoccupied with what was, in effect, the tip of the iceberg, they missed the
mass of evidence that lay beneath the surface.
"One cannot be certain, because packets of heat in the atmosphere do not
come conveniently labelled 'the contribution of anthropogenic warming,' "
Dr. Wingham elaborated, but the evidence is not "favourable to the notion
we are seeing the results of global warming".
Last summer, Dr. Wingham and three colleagues published an article in the
journal of the Royal Society that casts further doubt on the notion that global
warming is adversely affecting Antarctica. By
studying satellite data from 1992 to 2003 that surveyed 85% of the East
Antarctic ice sheet and 51% of the West Antarctic ice sheet (72% of the ice
sheet covering the entire land mass), they discovered that the Antarctic ice
sheet is growing at the rate of 5 millimetres per year (plus or minus 1 mm per
year). That makes Antarctica a sink, not a
source, of ocean water. According to their best estimates, Antarctica will
"lower [authors' italics] global sea levels by 0.08 mm" per year.
If these findings are validated in future by CryoSat-2 and other developments
that are able to assess the 28% of Antarctica not yet surveyed, the low-lying
areas of the world will have weathered the worst of the global warming
predictions: The populations of these areas -- in Bangladesh, in the Maldives,
and elsewhere -- will have found that, if anything, they can look forward to a
future with more nutrient-rich seacoast, not less.
CV OF A DENIER:
Duncan Wingham was educated at Leeds and Bath Universities
where he gained a B.Sc. and PhD. in Physics. He was appointed to a chair in the
Department of Space and Climate Physics in 1996, and to head of the Department
of Earth Sciences in October, 2005. Prof. Wingham is a member of the National
Environmental Research Council's Science and Technology Board and Earth
Observation Experts Group. He is a director of the NERC Centre for Polar
Observation & Modelling and principal scientist of the European Space
Agency CryoSat Satellite Mission, the first ESA Earth Sciences satellite
selected through open, scientific competition.