PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

1.5°C Paris Climate Agreement target too high for polar ice sheets and sea level rise

2025-05-20
(Press-News.org) Efforts to limit the global temperature increase to 1.5°C under the Paris Climate Agreement may not go far enough to save the world’s ice sheets, according to a new study.

Research led by Durham University, UK, suggests the target should instead be closer to 1°C to avoid significant losses from the polar ice sheets and prevent a further acceleration in sea level rise.

The team reviewed a wealth of evidence to examine the effect that the 1.5°C target would have on the ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctica, which together store enough ice to raise global sea levels by almost 65 metres.

The mass of ice lost from these ice sheets has quadrupled since the 1990s and they are currently losing around 370 billion tonnes of ice per year, with current warming levels of around 1.2°C above pre-industrial temperatures according to the latest Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report.

The authors argue that further warming to 1.5°C would likely generate several metres of sea level rise over the coming centuries as the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets melt in response to both warming air and ocean temperatures.

This would make it very difficult and far more expensive to adapt to rising sea levels, causing extensive loss and damage to coastal and island populations and leading to widespread displacement of hundreds of millions of people.

Policymakers and governments need to be more aware of the effects a 1.5°C rise in temperatures could have on ice sheets and sea levels, the researchers say.

Currently, around 230 million people live within one metre of sea level and melting ice represents an existential threat to those communities, including several low-lying nations.

Avoiding this scenario would require a global average temperature cooler than that of today, which the researchers hypothesise is probably closer to 1°C above pre-industrial levels or possibly even lower.

However, the researchers add that further work is urgently needed to more precisely determine a “safe” temperature target to avoid rapid sea level rise from melting ice sheets.

The research team also included experts from the universities of Bristol, UK, and Wisconsin-Madison and Massachusetts Amherst, both USA.

The research is published in the journal Communications Earth and Environment.

Lead author Professor Chris Stokes, in the Department of Geography, Durham University, UK, said: “There is a growing body of evidence that 1.5 °C is too high for the ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctica. We’ve known for a long time that some sea level rise is inevitable over the next few decades to centuries, but recent observations of ice sheet loss are alarming, even under current climate conditions.

“Limiting warming to 1.5°C would be a major achievement and this should absolutely be our focus. However, even if this target is met or only temporarily exceeded, people need to be aware that sea level rise is likely to accelerate to rates that are very difficult to adapt to – rates of one centimetre per year are not out of the question within the lifetime of our young people.

“We are not necessarily saying that all is lost at 1.5°C, but we are saying that every fraction of a degree really matters for the ice sheets - and the sooner we can halt the warming the better, because this makes it far easier to return to safer levels further down the line”

Professor Stokes added: “Put another way, and perhaps it is a reason for hope, we only have to go back to the early 1990s to find a time when the ice sheets looked far healthier.

“Global temperatures were around 1°C above pre-industrial back then and carbon dioxide concentrations were 350 parts per million, which others have suggested is a much safer limit for planet Earth. Carbon dioxide concentrations are currently around 424 parts per million and continue to increase.”

The research team combined evidence from past warm periods that were similar or slightly warmer than present, and measurements of how much ice is being lost under the present level of warming, together with projections of how much ice would be lost at different warming levels over the next few centuries.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, evidence from past warm periods shows that higher sea levels are increasingly likely the higher the warming and the longer it lasts.

Professor Andrea Dutton of the University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA, a co-author of the study, said: “Evidence recovered from past warm periods suggests that several meters of sea level rise – or more – can be expected when global mean temperature reaches 1.5 °C or higher. Furthermore, this evidence also suggests that the longer those warm temperatures are sustained, the greater the impact on ice melt and resulting sea-level rise.”

Fellow study co-author Jonathan Bamber, Professor of Glaciology and Earth Observation at the University of Bristol, UK, has been measuring changes in ice sheets for several decades. Professor Bamber said: “Recent satellite-based observations of ice sheet mass loss have been a huge wake-up call for the whole scientific and policy community working on sea level rise and its impacts. The models have just not shown the kind of responses that we have witnessed in the observations over the last three decades.”

Fellow co-author, Professor Rob DeConto, from the University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA, specialises in computer simulations of Antarctica that reveal how the ice sheet might change under different warming levels.

Professor DeConto said: “It is important to stress that these accelerating changes in the ice sheets and their contributions to sea level should be considered permanent on multi-generational timescales.

“Even if the Earth returns to its preindustrial temperature, it will still take hundreds to perhaps thousands of years for the ice sheets to recover. If too much ice is lost, parts of these ice sheets may not recover until the Earth enters the next ice age. In other words, land lost to sea level rise from melting ice sheets will be lost for a very, very long time. That’s why it is so critical to limit warming in the first place.”

Commenting on the research, Ambassador Carlos Fuller, long-time climate negotiator for Belize agreed that policymakers and governments need to be more aware of the effects of a 1.5°C temperature increase.

Belize long ago moved its capital inland; but its largest city will be inundated at just 1 meter of sea-level rise.

Ambassador Fuller said: "Findings such as these only sharpen the need to remain within the 1.5°C Paris Agreement limit, or as close as possible, so we can return to lower temperatures and protect our coastal cities." 

The research was funded by the UK’s Natural Environment Research Council.

ENDS

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Scientists discover potential new targets for Alzheimer’s drugs

2025-05-20
CAMBRIDGE, MA -- By combining information from many large datasets, MIT researchers have identified several new potential targets for treating or preventing Alzheimer’s disease. The study revealed genes and cellular pathways that haven’t been linked to Alzheimer’s before, including one involved in DNA repair. Identifying new drug targets is critical because many of the Alzheimer’s drugs that have been developed to this point haven’t been as successful as hoped. Working with researchers at Harvard Medical School, the team used data from humans and fruit flies to identify cellular pathways linked to neurodegeneration. ...

Scientists develop new treatment with potential to tackle commonest form of childhood cancer

2025-05-20
A combination of two drugs could improve outcomes and reduce the need for toxic chemotherapy for B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (B-ALL), the commonest cancer in childhood and one that can be particularly difficult to treat in older patients, according to Cambridge scientists. Although the research has so far only been conducted in cell lines and mice, the team is seeking funding to begin clinical trials in patients shortly. More than 500 people a year in the UK are diagnosed with B-ALL, many of whom are children, where it makes up 40% of all ...

Technique rapidly measures cells’ density, reflecting health and developmental state

2025-05-20
CAMBRIDGE, MA -- Measuring the density of a cell can reveal a great deal about the cell’s state. As cells proliferate, differentiate, or undergo cell death, they may gain or lose water and other molecules, which is revealed by changes in density. Tracking these tiny changes in cells’ physical state is difficult to do at a large scale, especially with single-cell resolution, but a team of MIT researchers has now found a way to measure cell density quickly and accurately — measuring up to 30,000 cells in a single hour. The researchers also showed that density ...

Mask users can now breathe easy on two counts

2025-05-20
Tokyo, Japan—The COVID-19 pandemic increased public awareness of the importance of mask use for personal protection. However, when the mesh size of mask fabrics is small enough to capture viruses, which are usually around one hundred nanometers in size, the fabric typically also restricts air flow, resulting in user discomfort. But now, researchers from Japan have found a way to avoid this. In a study published this month in Materials Advances, researchers from the Institute of Industrial Science, The University of Tokyo have overcome this bottleneck and developed a filter capable of capturing nanoparticles such ...

Aging reduces CAR-T cell effectiveness by impairing metabolism, study shows

2025-05-20
As people age, their immune systems become less efficient, posing a challenge for cancer therapies that rely on harnessing immune cells. In a new study published in Nature Cancer, researchers from the University of Lausanne (UNIL), the Lausanne University Hospital (CHUV), the Geneva University Hospitals (HUG) and the Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), show that this age-related immune decline has a measurable impact on CAR-T cell therapy, one of the most advanced forms of cancer immunotherapy. CAR-T ...

Why are patients with mitochondrial disease more susceptible to infections? New JAX study finds the answer

2025-05-20
Patients with rare mitochondrial diseases already face a host of serious health issues, from muscle weakness to neurological problems and heart conditions. But one of their most life-threatening challenges has remained a mystery—why are they so vulnerable to severe infections? Now, scientists at The Jackson Laboratory (JAX) may have finally pinpointed why. Their new study, published in Nature Communications, shows that damaged mitochondria put the immune system in a constant state of alert, leading to dangerous overreactions when patients encounter bacteria. This excessive immune ...

National Heart Centre Singapore implements cutting-edge artificial intelligence in nationwide project for rapid coronary artery disease prediction

2025-05-20
SENSE, a nationwide artificial intelligence (AI) initiative to interpret cardiac imaging scans in minutes, aiding early detection and prediction of coronary artery disease. NHCS CVS.AI Research Laboratory, a new purpose-built and dedicated facility with enhanced infrastructure to advance and drive novel AI technology in cardiac imaging. Singapore, 20 May 2025 – The National Heart Centre Singapore (NHCS) announces a major advancement in cardiac care research with the implementation of SENSE (Singapore hEart lesioN analySEr), a nationwide AI initiative that reduces the time taken to analyse cardiac scans, from hours to minutes. This breakthrough system will transform the ...

How molecules can ‘remember’ and contribute to memory and learning

2025-05-20
Researchers have discovered how an ion channel in the brain’s neurons has a kind of ‘molecular memory’, which contributes to the formation and preservation of lifelong memories. The researchers have identified a specific part of the ion channel at which new drugs for certain genetic diseases could be targeted. The study, led from Linköping University in Sweden, has been published in Nature Communications. One of the brain’s superpowers is its ability to learn from past experiences and form memories. These vital processes depend on the reshaping of connections between neurons in the brain. ...

New research links global climate patterns to wildfires in Los Angeles

2025-05-20
As wildfires continue to ravage regions from Los Angeles to South Korea, a new study featured on the cover of the Issue 7, 2025 of Advances in Atmospheric Sciences sheds light on the large-scale climate patterns influencing these devastating global extreme events. The research, led by Professor Young-Min Yang from Jeonbuk National University, reveals how tropical climate phenomena like the Madden-Julian Oscillation (MJO) can trigger dry, windy conditions that exacerbate wildfires in mid-latitude regions, including the western U.S. and East Asia. Wildfire prediction remains a major challenge due to rapidly changing weather conditions ...

The RESIL-Card project is piloting its resilience assessment tool across Europe.

2025-05-20
Paris, France, 19 May 2025 - The RESIL-Card project, co-funded by the EU4Health Work Programme, has reached a significant milestone with the recent launch of the pilot testing of its resilience assessment tool in selected European countries. This phase is part of the three-year project - led by We CARE, in partnership with GISE, Amsterdam UMC, and CatSalut - which aims to improve the preparedness and continuity of cardiovascular care during crises. As the first half of the project draws to a close, the first work package (WP1), which focused on conceptualising the resilience assessment tool, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Neurosymbolic AI could be leaner and smarter

Intuition-guided reinforcement learning for soft tissue manipulation with unknown constraints

Mount Sinai surgeons perform first heart-liver-kidney transplants in New York State

‘Sharkitecture:’ A nanoscale look inside a blacktip shark’s skeleton

Public opinion on who should do content moderation

Accounting for marine ecosystems in China promises greater environmental and economic sustainability

Diabetes drug gives hope for new treatment for prostate cancer

New US dementia cases in decline, but continued rise in people living with the condition

Doctors group asks National Institutes of Health to investigate Arizona State University for research misconduct

St. Jude scientist Charles Mullighan elected to the Royal Society of London

1.5°C Paris Climate Agreement target too high for polar ice sheets and sea level rise

Scientists discover potential new targets for Alzheimer’s drugs

Scientists develop new treatment with potential to tackle commonest form of childhood cancer

Technique rapidly measures cells’ density, reflecting health and developmental state

Mask users can now breathe easy on two counts

Aging reduces CAR-T cell effectiveness by impairing metabolism, study shows

Why are patients with mitochondrial disease more susceptible to infections? New JAX study finds the answer

National Heart Centre Singapore implements cutting-edge artificial intelligence in nationwide project for rapid coronary artery disease prediction

How molecules can ‘remember’ and contribute to memory and learning

New research links global climate patterns to wildfires in Los Angeles

The RESIL-Card project is piloting its resilience assessment tool across Europe.

Researchers identify molecular brake that regulates synaptic maturation

Study links residual inflammation in psoriasis patients to obesity and fatty liver disease

Vaping increases dependency more than nicotine gum

New scientific articles highlight potential link between microplastics in ultra-processed foods and brain health

New study reveals how 5'LysTTT tRNA fragments protect neurons during botulinum toxin exposure

Prader-Willi syndrome reveals unique link between genetics and psychiatric disorders

Dynamic memory engrams reveal how the brain forms, stores, and updates memories

Researchers decode neural pathways of cognitive flexibility across species

Research team traces evolutionary history of bacterial circadian clock on ancient Earth

[Press-News.org] 1.5°C Paris Climate Agreement target too high for polar ice sheets and sea level rise