Melting Greenland ice has already caused a 1.2 centimeter sea level rise
The melting of the Greenland ice sheet has contributed 1.2 centimeters
to the global sea level rise in just under 20 years, according to a monitor.
The Greenland ice sheet has lost around 4,700 gigatonnes since measurements
began in April 2002, enough to submerge the entire United States by half a
meter. That’s according to satellite data collected up to August 2021 from the
GRACE and GRACE-Follow-On programs — joint U.S.-German satellite research
efforts.
GRACE data updated to August 2021, see https://t.co/MXixpICRjl. Since measurements began in April 2002, the Greenland Ice Sheet has lost about 4700 gigatons (=4700 km³, enough to cover the entire U.S. by half a meter of water). This melt has contributed 1.2 cm to sea level rise. pic.twitter.com/OubkOgVAiR
— Polar Portal (@PolarPortal) January 31, 2022
The data indicates that the ice is melting, especially on Greenland’s west
coast, the Danish Polar Portal tweeted this week. One gigatonne is the
equivalent of 1 billion tonnes.
The Greenland ice sheet covers a good four-fifths of the total area of the
largest island on Earth. Only the Antarctic ice sheet is larger.
The Polar Portal is a platform where Danish Arctic research institutions
present findings on the state of the Greenland ice sheet and sea ice.
Greenland is an autonomous country, within the Kingdom of Denmark. The island
is particularly affected by climate change, as the Arctic has already warmed
significantly more than any other region on earth.
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