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Aerial view of a large iceberg floating near an ice shelf under grey skies 0 Aerial view of a large iceberg floating near an ice shelf under grey skies 0

Heat from El Ni帽o can warm oceans off West Antarctica 鈥 and melt floating ice shelves from below

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Maurice Huguenin
Matthew England
Paul Spence
Maurice Huguenin, Matthew England, Paul Spence,

El Nino can direct more warm water to the base of West Antarctic ice shelves, accelerating melting and increasing global sea level.

As snow falls on Antarctica, layers build up and turn to ice. Over time, this compressed snow has become a continent-sized glacier, or ice sheet. It鈥檚 enormous 鈥 the size of Australia and far larger than the continental United States.

As the weight of ice builds up, the ice sheet begins to move towards the oceans. When it reaches the sea, the ice floats. These floating extensions are known as ice shelves. The largest is wide.

When the ocean water has a temperature close to 0掳C, these ice shelves can persist for a long time. But when temperatures rise, even a little, the ice melts from below. Antarctic ice shelves are now losing an alarming , adding more water to the ocean and accelerating global sea level rise by . Ice shelves in West Antarctica are particularly prone to melting from the ocean, as many are close to water masses above 0掳C.

While the melting trend is clear and concerning, the amount can vary substantially from year-to-year due to the impact of both natural climate fluctuations and human-made climate change. To figure out what is going on and to prepare for the future, we need to tease apart the different drivers 鈥 especially El Ni帽o-Southern Oscillation, the world鈥檚 largest year-to-year natural climate driver.

Our explores how heat brought by El Ni帽o can warm the ocean around West Antarctica and increase melting of the ice shelves from below.

Antarctic Ice Mass Loss 2002-2023. Credit: NASA Climate Change.

How can El Ni帽o-Southern Oscillation affect Antarctica?

Australians are very familiar with the two phases of this climate driver, El Ni帽o and La Ni帽a, as they tend to bring us hotter, dryer weather and cooler, wetter weather, respectively. But the influence of this cycle is much larger, affecting weather and climate all around the Pacific.

Can it reach through Antarctica鈥檚 cold, fast currents of air and water? Yes.

Giant convective thunderstorms in the Pacific鈥檚 equatorial regions move east during El Ni帽o and intensify in the West during La Ni帽a. As these storm systems change, they excite ripples in the atmosphere that are able to travel large distances, just as waves can cross oceans. Within two months, these atmospheric waves reach the Antarctic continent, where their energy can affect the coastal atmosphere and ocean circulation. During El Ni帽o, the energy from these waves weakens the easterly winds off West Antarctica (and vice versa for La Ni帽a).

Using , researchers recently found that West Antarctic ice shelves actually gain height but lose mass during El Ni帽o. That鈥檚 because more low-density snow falls at the top of the ice shelves, while at the same time more warm water flows under the ice shelves where it melts compressed high-density ice from underneath.

What we don鈥檛 yet know is how this warmer water (above zero) comes up from below. Similarly, we don鈥檛 know what happens during La Ni帽a.

Answering these questions with the few observations we have from Antarctica is challenging because this climate driver doesn鈥檛 happen in isolation. Storms, tides, large eddy currents and other climate drivers such as the can change the temperatures of the water under ice shelves too, and they can occur at the same time as El Ni帽o.

Finding a needle in the ice stack

So how did we do it? Modelling.

We take a high-resolution global ocean circulation model and added El Ni帽o and La Ni帽a events to the baseline simulation. By doing so, we can examine what these anomalies do to the currents and temperatures around Antarctica.

The energy brought by El Ni帽o鈥檚 atmospheric waves to West Antarctica weakens the prevailing easterly winds along the coasts.

Normally, most of the warm water reservoir is located off the continental shelf rather than on the continental shelf. As the winds weaken, more of this warmer water 鈥 known as 鈥 is able to flow onto the continental shelf and near the base of the floating ice shelves.

During El Ni帽o, weaker winds along the coasts push less cold Antarctic surface waters towards the continent, allowing warmer Circumpolar Deep Water to flow to the base of the ice shelves. During La Ni帽a, stronger winds drive a wedge of cold water up towards the continent, reducing the inflow of warm water. Maurice Huguenin,

We call this water mass 鈥渨arm鈥, but that鈥檚 relative 鈥 it鈥檚 only 1鈥2掳C above freezing, and the heat only warms the water on the continental shelf by about 0.5掳C. But that鈥檚 enough to begin melting ice shelves, which are at or below freezing point.

As you鈥檇 expect, the longer the warm water stays on the shelf and the hotter it is, the more melting occurs.

During La Ni帽a, the opposite occurs and the ice rebounds. Winds along the coast strengthen, pushing more cold surface water onto the continental shelf and preventing warm water from flowing under the ice shelves.

What does this mean for the near future?

Researchers have found El Ni帽o and La Ni帽a have already become .

If this trend continues, as , we can expect warming around West Antarctica to get even stronger during El Ni帽o events, accelerating ice shelf melting and speeding up sea level rise.

More frequent and stronger El Ni帽o events could also push us closer to a in the West Antarctic ice sheet, after which accelerated melting and mass loss could become self-perpetuating. That means the ice wouldn鈥檛 melt and reform but begin to steadily melt.

More bad news? Unfortunately, yes. The only way to stop the worst from happening is to get to net zero carbon emissions as quickly as humanly possible. The Conversation

, Postdoctoral research associate in Physical Oceanography, ; , Scientia Professor and Deputy Director of the ARC Australian Centre for Excellence in Antarctic Science (ACEAS), , and , Associate professor of oceanography,

This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the .

Antarctic Ice Mass Loss 2002-2023.

Video: NASA Climate Change.