Greenland's ice sheet melting seven times faster than in 1990s. (It's global warming, not 'climate change')
Greenland’s ice sheet
is melting much faster than previously thought, threatening hundreds of
millions of people with inundation and bringing some of the irreversible
impacts of the climate emergency much closer. Ice is being lost from
Greenland seven times faster than it was in the 1990s, and the scale and speed
of ice loss is much higher than was predicted in the comprehensive studies of
global climate science by the Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change, according to data.
That means sea level
rises are likely to reach 67cm by 2100, about 7cm more than the IPCC’s main
prediction. Such a rate of rise will put 400 million people at risk of flooding
every year, instead of the 360 million predicted by the IPCC, by the end of the
century. Sea level rises
also add to the risk of storm surges, when the fiercer storms made more likely
by global heating batter coastal regions. These impacts are likely to strike
coastal areas all around the world....
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2019/dec/10/greenland-ice-sheet-melting-seven-times-faster-than-in-1990s