Published: June 13, 2022 By

Banner image: A penguin navigates听sea ice听in Antarctica. (Credit: John Weller)

A new report from the Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research (SCAR) reveals how climate change is significantly impacting Antarctica鈥檚 ice sheets, climate and ecosystems, with far-reaching global consequences.听

, released May 24 at the Antarctic Treaty Consultative Meeting in Berlin, shows that Antarctic ice sheets are melting, the continent鈥檚 climate is changing, and the Southern Ocean is warming, becoming more acidic and losing oxygen. Locally, changing climates are already affecting the region鈥檚 iconic whales, seals, penguins, and the krill they rely on for food. Emperor penguins may be all but gone by the end of the century unless urgent action is taken, the report concludes.

But while seemingly isolated from the rest of the world, Antarctica鈥檚 changes also have impacts on all other continents.听

鈥淲hat happens in Antarctica, does not stay in Antarctica,鈥 said Cassandra Brooks, assistant professor of environmental studies and contributor to the report, specifically on marine elements of the region.听

Penguins on sea ice

Penguins navigate the sea ice in Antarctica. (Credit:听John Weller)听

Melting ice sheets mean that global average sea level rise will put nearly a billion people at risk from coastal flooding over the next several decades, a number that could increase by the end of the century. The Antarctic has also played a profound role in regulating the world鈥檚 climate, in part by absorbing heat and carbon dioxide emissions resulting from human activity.听

The report also states that: 鈥淕lobal impacts influenced by Antarctic change include extreme climate and weather events, droughts, wildfires and floods, and ocean acidification.鈥

For example, current levels of global warming have already committed the planet to about 16 inches (40 cm) of global sea level rise, which turns what was considered a one in 100-year coastal flood event into an annual one.听

鈥淎ntarctica鈥檚 changes have profound consequences for all of us,鈥 said Monash University Professor Steven Chown, who led the report and is SCAR鈥檚 immediate past president. Chown is also Director of Securing Antarctica's Environmental Future (SAEF), of which Brooks is a Partner Investigator, through 兔子先生传媒文化作品鈥檚 status as a Participating Organization.听

The report makes clear that adhering to, and preferably exceeding, the Paris Climate Agreement greenhouse gas emissions reductions targets will substantially lessen changes to the Antarctic and their implications for society.

Its messages were developed specifically for the Parties to the Antarctic Treaty, who gathered in Berlin for their 44th Annual Meeting. The parties are those countries responsible for the environmental management of the Antarctic, including the United States. This was the first in-person meeting since 2019 and a key opportunity for the parties to strengthen their responses to climate change.听

The report was well received, and Parties acknowledged the need for urgent action, however they failed to reach consensus agreement to provide protections for Emperor penguins, which are threatened to near extinction under future climate projection scenarios.听

There is another opportunity to bring the report forward in October, when governments meet to discuss management of the Southern Ocean.听

鈥淐urrently, governments are discussing protecting vast areas of the Southern Ocean, and other initiatives for more climate resilient management. But as highlighted in our report, a changing Antarctica has global implications,鈥 said Brooks, who recently received a from the National Science Foundation to study the Antarctic toothfish, the Southern Ocean鈥檚 top fish predator and an indicator of the health of the Ross Sea system.听

鈥淚t remains a global responsibility to reduce emissions to safeguard Antarctica, and in doing so, safeguard our own futures.鈥 听


As a global leader in climate, environmental and energy research, the University of Colorado Boulder is partnering with United Nations Human Rights to co-host the Right Here,听Right Now Global Climate Summit in fall 2022.听

Learn More Receive Media Updates