James Hansen’s new climate study is terrifying, but he still has hope
When James Hansen speaks, climate hawks listen. Hansen was legendary
during his long career as NASA’s chief climatologist for being ahead of
the curve on seeing the threat of catastrophic climate change. Now he
teaches at Columbia University, and he has more bad news to deliver.
According to a study conducted by Hansen and 16 coauthors, being published this week in the European Geophysical Union’s open-access journal Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, the effects of even moderate warming on sea-level rise are worse than previously believed.
Hansen and his colleagues combined analysis of the historical record
with modeling and current observation and found that the rate of oceanic
ice melting in Greenland and Antarctica may exceed our expectations. As
InsideClimate News explains,
the scientists “analyzed how an influx of cold freshwater from the
planet’s melting ice sheets will disrupt the ocean’s circulation … They
concluded the influx of freshwater from melting ice sheets in modern
times would essentially shut down the ocean’s circulation, causing cool
water to stay in the Earth’s polar regions and equatorial water to warm
up even faster.”
