Dramatic Cooling and Recent Ice Shelf Advance Over the Antarctic Peninsula

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Scientists struggle to keep their stories straight regarding the anthropogenic CO2 impact on polar climates.

It is claimed that anthropogenic CO2 emissions from burning fossil fuels are responsible for amplifying warming (“polar amplification “) and ice melt in polar climates, consistent with pronouncements pertaining to anthropogenic global warming.

However, Antarctica’s Larsen Ice Shelf station indicates a massive cooling trend, -1.1°C per decade, has been ongoing since the late 1990s (Bozkurt et al., 2020).

Image Source: Bozkurt et al., 2020

About 85% of the East Antarctic Peninsula ice sheet has sustained “uninterrupted advance” since 2003 (Christie et al., 2022).

Image Source: Christie et al., 2022

East and West Antarctica have been significantly cooling since 1979. Overall cooling rates of -0.7°C and -0.42°C per decade from 1979 to 2018 indicate -2.8°C and -1.68°C total cooling, respectively, for the mainland continent during these decades (Zhu et al., 2021).

The Antarctic Peninsula only began significant cooling in the 1990s (Oliva et al., 2017), and thus the 21st century cooling has not yet overtaken or reversed the overall trend since 1979.

Image Source: Zhu et al., 2021

Other scientists suggest rising CO2 leads to cooling, not warming, in Antarctica. The CO2 greenhouse effect forcing is also “comparatively weak”, or close to 0 W/m², for Greenland (Schmithüsen et al., 2015). 

Image Source: Schmithüsen et al., 2015

None of these trends or attributions are consistent with claims of anthropogenic global warming or polar amplification as a consequence of rising CO2 emissions.

via NoTricksZone

By Kenneth Richard on 3. November 2022