How long before all the ice melts? - BBC World Service

2023 ж. 17 Қаң.
261 697 Рет қаралды

We know the Earth's atmosphere is warming and it's thanks to us and our taste for fossil fuels. But how quickly is this melting the ice sheets, ice caps, and glaciers that remain on our planet? That's what listener David wants to know.
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 bbc.in/3VyyriM
With the help of a team of climate scientists in Greenland, Marnie Chesterton goes to find the answer, in an icy landscape that's ground zero in the story of thawing. She discovers how Greenland’s ice sheet is sliding faster off land, and sees that the tiniest of creatures are darkening the ice surface and accelerating its melt.
CrowdScience explores what we're in store for when it comes to melting ice. In the lead-up to yet another UN climate conference, we unpack what is contributing to sea level rise - from ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctica, to melting mountain glaciers and warming oceans. There's a lot of ice at the poles. The question is: how much of it will still be there in the future?
Research Professor and climate scientist Jason Box from the Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland shows us how much ice Greenland we've already committed ourselves to losing, even if we stopped burning all fossil fuels today. His team, including Jakob Jakobsen, show us how these scientists collect all this data that helps feed climate models and helps us all to understand how quickly the seas might rise.
Professor Martyn Trantor from Aarhus University helps us understand why a darkening Greenland ice sheet would only add to the problem of melting. And climate scientist Ruth Mottram from the Danish Meteorological Institute breaks down how the ice is breaking down in Antarctica and other glaciers around the world.
Check out more videos on climate change and the environment here: • Climate change and the...
You can also find episodes of CrowdScience here: • CrowdScience
----------------
This is the official BBC World Service KZhead channel.
If you like what we do, you can also find us here:
Instagram 👉🏽 / bbcworldser. .
Twitter 👉🏽 / bbcworldservice
Facebook 👉🏽 / bbcworldservice
BBC World Service website 👉🏽 www.bbc.co.uk/worldserviceradio
Thanks for watching and subscribing!
#BBCWorldService #Science #Greenland #ClimateChange

Пікірлер
  • Did your cameras stop working? Why not have footage of the topic?

    @TheRandallarthur@TheRandallarthur Жыл бұрын
    • whats with the stupid designs? give us some film.

      @richardravenclaw318@richardravenclaw318 Жыл бұрын
    • I believe that although there are visuals for this post the poster is BBC WORLD SERVICE which is a radio channel. I watched the vid titled "is it too late to save the Greenland Ice Sheet" which is the visuals to this.

      @davedixon2068@davedixon2068 Жыл бұрын
  • Why (on Earth!) can't BBC afford to send a camera man? Or did they send one? Is there some legal reason for there being 90% of audio with no visuals?

    @PEHook@PEHook Жыл бұрын
    • BBC World is a RADIO broadcast worldwide.

      @jimthain8777@jimthain8777 Жыл бұрын
    • Does it make the information any staggering?

      @thiemokellner1893@thiemokellner1893 Жыл бұрын
    • Something to do with a wish not to produce more CO2 with extra luggage/persons not needed for the production. it's good of them to do that.

      @bluegold21@bluegold218 ай бұрын
  • I notice that the ice looks dirty which absorbs more heat from sunlight and further increases the melt.

    @davidmchugh-hypnotherapist7213@davidmchugh-hypnotherapist7213 Жыл бұрын
    • Because as it melts the few particles of dust at each new level accumulates more and more at the top. Yes this heats faster and creates a positive feedback loop. 😕

      @EmeraldView@EmeraldView Жыл бұрын
    • when i saw that ice, ..it looked "water laden" to me, .. very wet, loaded with water, slush maybe depending on the temp.

      @-LightningRod-@-LightningRod- Жыл бұрын
    • This is usually caused from the ash from forest fires. Ash travels far and wide and can land on ice which in turns heats up the ice because the sun does not deflect. In turn causes the ice to melt faster.

      @maryjeanjones7569@maryjeanjones7569 Жыл бұрын
    • Nothing is melting. End of sea ice predicted constantly for the past 50 years.

      @donaldkasper8346@donaldkasper8346 Жыл бұрын
    • Then add in the methane deposits 😂😂 w re fkd

      @StrangeBrew123@StrangeBrew123 Жыл бұрын
  • Martyn Tranten’s comment, “we shouldn’t play God”, resonated. However, the bulk of the planets million and billionaires don’t share this view, obviously, and that’s why we are racing to extinction. 😢

    @jasonbrambach6957@jasonbrambach6957 Жыл бұрын
    • I am horrified of all those ideas of geoengineering as if we do not already (unintentionally) and fail miserably.

      @thiemokellner1893@thiemokellner1893 Жыл бұрын
    • @@thiemokellner1893 Bill only wants to SRM you so the AGW doesn’t get you. it’s entirely for your own good & he wants you to know that the rumours of him & his father being raging fans of eugenics are just vicious rumours. $CIENCE!™️ BELIEVE !

      @lw1zfog@lw1zfog9 ай бұрын
    • @@dr5290 those so called ‘elites’ would have you thinking that overpopulation is the issue, when it’s really just the equitable distribution of resources that needs sorting out.

      @lw1zfog@lw1zfog8 ай бұрын
  • The BBC World service is a radio programme and all they have done is spliced in a few bits of video to make it more interesting. Many of the videos on you tube would be better if we didn't have to look at them.

    @ianfowler2652@ianfowler26527 ай бұрын
  • Whats more alarming than the melting ice is that Britan seemingly doesnt have cameras in their iphones. Only audio on a youtube video? This is tragic.

    @jasonstephenson9959@jasonstephenson99592 ай бұрын
  • This took place years ago, the 80’s I believe. The Isaac walten league had a local man present his chart’s for a local lake of ice in and ice out on the areas biggest lake. He got back to early 1900’s up to present then, it was completely obvious that things are definitely warming! His chart’s laid it out perfectly!

    @marvinmartin4692@marvinmartin46925 ай бұрын
  • I like how the people reporting on the melting ice flying a helicopter adding to the melting.

    @georgehagstrom1461@georgehagstrom1461Ай бұрын
  • Really wish we could have got video of all the beautiful sounding glaciers you are describing lol.

    @trailerparkart2429@trailerparkart24296 ай бұрын
  • I have been living near the salt water for 40 years and I can't see a single inch of sea level rise along my foreshore . The tide levels look the same to me .

    @jvalentine8376@jvalentine837611 ай бұрын
    • Data supports that. Tide charts haven't accelerated for all cities. No change in the rate of sea level change over the last 100 years.

      @dfinlen@dfinlen11 ай бұрын
    • More scam propaganda, no sea level rise acceleration, and no g. warming in the last 5+ years. 🙄

      @clivehorridge@clivehorridge11 ай бұрын
    • May I ask which sea your near?

      @SunShineSeLecT@SunShineSeLecT9 ай бұрын
    • People are mostly water so the 4 billion or so people that have been born in 40 years have used up the water that would have risen the sea level. Does that make sense?

      @LulaJake@LulaJake8 ай бұрын
    • @@LulaJake Makes as much sense as saying all the ice is going to melt when 100 meters of snow fell since 1942 when planes had to land in Greenland, that's where they are now, under 100 meters of snow. Look up Glacier Girl.

      @MountainFisher@MountainFisher8 ай бұрын
  • 28 trips to the Artic, no doubt he's planted a lot of trees to offset his carbon footprint? My question is, how much weight is there in ice, and how much will the land rise once all the Greenland Ice has melted? Are there any concerns about trapped organisms being released and causing us potential harm? Thank you for uploading and sharing.

    @felipearbustopotd@felipearbustopotd8 ай бұрын
    • Some carbon emissions are worthwhile. Ice weight loss does have an effect on volcanic activity but it's not the biggest concern. There are concerns about trapped diseases (and some very old organisms have been reanimated) but the risk is mostly considered very low (they'd probably be very vulnerable to antibiotics if they even got going at all -those reanimations happened in lab conditions).

      @Timlagor@Timlagor8 ай бұрын
    • Oh, so you think sea level rise won't harm us? JFC! Wake up cuz. Every major city on a coastline will be permanently flooded within the next 50 years. 200+ nuclear power stations are on tidal waterways. Imagine Fukushima x 200 and without any way to clean it up or hold back the radioactive material. So probably Fukushima X god knows what. No life on the planet would get away from that. And that will happen just with the loss of Antarctica's Thwaites glacier. As far as disease is concerned probably the worst thing that can come out of the frozen ground is Anthrax. However, the Greenland ice shelf does not have any dead animals inside it. Except maybe at its grounded point. But if the melt gets down to there a disease will be the last thing on our minds as we try to evolve gills in water-world.

      @bluegold21@bluegold218 ай бұрын
    • Like what’s happening with the permafrost, you mean?

      @fabiengerard8142@fabiengerard81427 ай бұрын
    • @@fabiengerard8142 Yes

      @felipearbustopotd@felipearbustopotd7 ай бұрын
    • In

      @silversurfertim2123@silversurfertim21236 ай бұрын
  • Why are we subjected to that odd looking art?

    @parrsnipps4495@parrsnipps4495 Жыл бұрын
    • You must be living a life of plenty if this is your only sorrow.

      @thiemokellner1893@thiemokellner1893 Жыл бұрын
    • @@thiemokellner1893 RIP to your bitter ass

      @tossancuyota7848@tossancuyota7848 Жыл бұрын
    • 🤣🤣🤣

      @sarahsokal@sarahsokal Жыл бұрын
    • Budget cuts

      @nutterbutter4232@nutterbutter423211 ай бұрын
    • Brainwashing

      @arsemyth8920@arsemyth892011 ай бұрын
  • Thanks for your reporting on this issue. The production quality is not worthy of BBC. The information is good. So, thanks for that. But this may as well have been produced as a written document.

    @bobanalacon3794@bobanalacon379411 ай бұрын
    • agree, what's the point of making a video if it's to mainly show a graphic?

      @radjalomas8854@radjalomas885411 ай бұрын
    • @@radjalomas8854 Because it isn't a video. It's from the BBC world service, which is a radio broadcaster. This is taken from one of their radio programmes.

      @simonsimon325@simonsimon32510 ай бұрын
  • If the answer was in the very near future, would it make for a typical cozy announcement on a mainstream media platform?

    @ianmills9659@ianmills9659 Жыл бұрын
  • I must say, I am loving your graphic. I thought it was a chart showing water running over glaciers and melting the ice, but, I realize the glaciers in this animation are actually melting way way slower than the glaciers!

    @jett7891@jett7891 Жыл бұрын
    • I thought the graphic ''got in the way'' I mean the commentary talks of ''wonderful views'' but you dont see them because of the graphic!

      @alphillips5478@alphillips54788 ай бұрын
    • Glacial and sea ice is melting at the rate of 2,000,000,000 tons/day. And ice absorbs 80 times as much heat as water.

      @StressRUs@StressRUs8 ай бұрын
  • Love your work. Pardon please but does the plethora of internal combustion engine contribute to the melting factor ? Not just automobile but all of it. Lawn equipment,trains, construction equipment, aircraft,boats and shopping ? Can a person effectively make a difference beyond give up the personal ride ?

    @JamesPilkenton-se5cx@JamesPilkenton-se5cx6 ай бұрын
  • Love all the panic, fear, disaster hype, doom, dispair, etc. keep up the good work

    @morganoverbay8783@morganoverbay8783Ай бұрын
  • What media like the BBC should be explaining is what was the last ice age , when did it start , what caused it (even that is still being debated ) what was its extremes and how long it has been melting to get an idea of the whole process .

    @grosvenorclub@grosvenorclub Жыл бұрын
    • No. This is not just climate change. This is a man made global warming crisis. There hasn’t been a time where warming has happened this quickly. Nor has there been a time when co2 has risen this quickly. Ever.

      @Encephalitisify@Encephalitisify Жыл бұрын
    • We are currently recovering from a miniature ice age caused by volcanic eruption.

      @rge24491@rge24491 Жыл бұрын
    • You're confusing glacial periods (ice ages) and interglacial periods (like the climate of the dinosaurs) which last 10's to 100's of millions of years, with glacial maximums and glacial minimums that last 10's to 100's of thousands of years. The last glacial period began 55+mya and the earth is currently still in the middle of that glacial period. We are at the end of a glacial minimum that began 12+tya and should be slowly cooling as we head towards the next glacial maximum, instead of rapidly warming Search: Melankovich Cycles. Enjoy.

      @satanicmicrochipv5656@satanicmicrochipv56565 ай бұрын
  • From NASA…”The question: Melt ice cubes in a glass of water, and the water level will not change. Can the same be said for ice floating in the ocean? The answer: There is a common misconception that sea level change comes only from ice attached to land, and not from floating sea ice. Although that is mostly true, it turns out that there is an effect, even if it is minor. An often-overlooked ingredient makes a significant difference: saltiness. Various studies show that because floating ice is made of fresh water, it actually increases sea level slightly when it melts into the salty sea - unlike what happens in your water glass. A floating object, like an iceberg or other sea ice, displaces its own weight in water. But fresh water is less dense than salt water. So, when floating ice melts and becomes liquid, it takes up more volume than the seawater it displaced when it was ice, raising sea level. This has about 3% the effect of grounded ice-melt and raises sea level.”

    @spraudoggy@spraudoggy7 ай бұрын
  • Why is the video a wavy stream of orange and blue blanks - where is the actual video feed?

    @justinsnelling8053@justinsnelling8053 Жыл бұрын
  • So, a fellow told me on the net that it takes 343 joules (BTUs) of heat to melt just one GRAM of ice. So, if Greenland is losing 250-280 GT (1 Km X 1Km X 7m)/yr., well, you do the math. My 'puter exploded and then melted into a steaming pile of bubbling plastic when I tried to do it! We burned 8,000,000,000 TONS of coal in 2021, and we mindlessly and so often needlessly burn 100,000,000 BARRELS of oil DAILY, driving 23 ZJ into the oceans every year. Remember, you do the math, my 'puter is toast. We are accelerating our drive to extinction much, much faster than any of the MSM (yes, even my dear BBC) has told us, otherwise we'd be eliminating ALL unnecessary travel by any fossil fuel burning conveyance, and using CONTRACEPTION to prevent the horror that awaits the next generation and after, if there is an "after".

    @StressRUs@StressRUs8 ай бұрын
  • Sea level is rising at about 3.6 mm per year so it really is nothing to be worried about but we should prepare for it and reduce our CO2 emissions. However it is the worlds biggest economies who continue to do little in this respect making all the efforts of the a small few nations like the UK futile while making life unnecessarily harder for those citizens.

    @stephenmcdermott4435@stephenmcdermott44358 ай бұрын
  • I know that the ice wall is decently a problem while it's melting especially when they don't know exactly where the water is going to especially when they are thinking the sea level will rise hugely

    @zigniingiz@zigniingiz11 ай бұрын
  • Thanks for the report. One problem I have never seen mentioned is that there is no need to melt the ice to rise the sea level, it suffices that glaciers calve into the ocean. It will do the job just fine. The melting can take than whenever it does. Am I mistaken? How "good" are the chances that a huge amount of ice gets calved into the sea, let's say 1/7th of the Greenland ice shield, in "on go" just because there is enough ice molten to make parts of the shield swim enough to glide enough for the slope it is on?

    @thiemokellner1893@thiemokellner1893 Жыл бұрын
    • I did a model I put sand in bucket and water around it. Than I added ice that raised the water level. When the ice melt the water volume leval stayed the same. So to say the sea will rise is a lie.

      @Nathan-ry3yu@Nathan-ry3yu11 ай бұрын
    • @@Nathan-ry3yu Your model is incomplete. If adding the ice made raise the level of your water, it is a model for the ice swimming in the Arctic sea. You might add a mighty block of ice on top of your sand on a stone that does not touch the water. Mighty only to see the melting effect on the water level more easily. The adaptation reflects the glacier ice in high mountain, the ice on Greenland and on the Antarctic continent. Or if you want it simpler, place a cube of ice in a glas that gets smaller to its base, e.g. coca-cola, such that it does not touch the ground the cube has to be big enough. After the ice has molten, you can tell us whether the level of water in the glas has risen.

      @thiemokellner1893@thiemokellner189311 ай бұрын
    • ​​@@Nathan-ry3yu are you trying to make a joke or ... first, how old are you? Change your experiment. Place a brick in the bucket. Then fill the bucket below the top of the brick. Now put a block of ice on top of the brick. I think you will be able to figure it out without waiting for the ice to melt.

      @pakde8002@pakde800211 ай бұрын
    • The calving only occurs when there is sufficient ice for the whole length of the glacier to have flowed to the sea. So the total ice captured in the glacier has not changed.

      @dfinlen@dfinlen11 ай бұрын
    • @@thiemokellner1893 Not enough land coverage in ice to make a significant impact on sea levels to back up that theory of yours. Antarctica isn't as large as scientists had thought. It's actually made up of hundreds of islands. With majority off the surrounding sea covered in ice. That makes up majority of its ice coverage. New data shows Antarctica if it melts only about 2% sea leval may rise but no evidence to state it will happen either based on new discoveries of sea water leaking between our tectonic plates in the sea and getting trapped in rocks deep within our interior planet. Theirs studies that earth interior has 3 times the water trapped in rocks in our planet interior that what sits on the surface.

      @Nathan-ry3yu@Nathan-ry3yu11 ай бұрын
  • Wish there was video with this, especially with the purple algea...

    @andrea.w211@andrea.w21110 ай бұрын
  • Thanks for posting.

    @jonathaneffemey944@jonathaneffemey944 Жыл бұрын
  • Also what about the South Atlanic Gyre of freshwater melt. Not mentioned and impact on AMOC.

    @kevinowen3702@kevinowen37027 ай бұрын
  • Greenland should worry us but arctic Sea Ice looks likely to be the first unignorable ice event when it first runs out in the mid-2030s. (which will massively impact Greenland)

    @Timlagor@Timlagor8 ай бұрын
    • Antartica's Thwaites Glacier will probably be the first big SLR event. It's known as the doomsday glacier.

      @bluegold21@bluegold218 ай бұрын
    • ​@@bluegold21I'm pro melting so see same stats you do but glumly. 2223 at +8.5C which tbf would have been a lot Well past the era Star Trek is set in before Greenland melts at 4C... +2 think ice free Y3K 🥳

      @DrSmooth2000@DrSmooth20007 ай бұрын
    • @@DrSmooth2000 If Thwaites collapses that is a 7m rise defo before the end of the century. And highly likely at least 6 feet before mid-century. 2m is a massive game changer and will exacerbate the melting of all other ice stores. Greenland, as it shrinks, will increase it's rate of melting due to the physics. Smaller objects have more surface area to mass plus the lowering of the glacier's altitude will obviously bring it into warmer air. Add the increase in global temps heating the oceans and I can not see how we can avoid 14 to 20 meters SLR by the end of the century without beginning to scrub the atmosphere of CO2 now. That is a calamity for civilisation and the ELE we should avoid. I fear for large ocean-bound mammals. We may lose the likes of Whales forever. It's all looking pretty grim.

      @bluegold21@bluegold217 ай бұрын
  • With the accelerated warming and melting I don't see it taking millennia to melt. What really worries me is that the glaciers will break lose and slide off into the ocean en mass. If that happens, not only will it immediately raise sea levels dramatically but it will create a tsunami like we have never seen in our lifetimes. I hope you are right and we do have hundreds/thousands of years. I just don't see it from the studies I have seen.

    @jim14-us4ii@jim14-us4ii Жыл бұрын
    • I hope you don’t rely on the BBC for your views on global warming.

      @ianrowley5762@ianrowley5762 Жыл бұрын
    • @@ianrowley5762 And what scientific evidence do you rely on?

      @jim14-us4ii@jim14-us4ii Жыл бұрын
    • The IPCC concluded we are already in “abrupt climate change”. In other words, irreversible extinction.

      @jasonbrambach6957@jasonbrambach6957 Жыл бұрын
    • @@jasonbrambach6957 I don't believe it is irreversible yet, but it is approaching fast. I believe we do have the technology, the tools to reverse it still, but I believe we lack the will to try. If it happens in the most catastrophic way imaginable mankind could be knocked back to the stone age, but I think some will survive. We are a tenacious virus. The planet getting a little fever won't be enough to be rid of us.

      @jim14-us4ii@jim14-us4ii Жыл бұрын
    • Same

      @StrangeBrew123@StrangeBrew123 Жыл бұрын
  • The main problem is that they look at research data in isolation, but Earth is a closed system so everything is interconnected. This means that the rate of change won't be linear but rather exponential.

    @jihadjoe4957@jihadjoe49578 ай бұрын
    • bingo!

      @lorimason2288@lorimason22886 ай бұрын
  • In Antartica and southern Chile and Argentina tours are Still being advertised, what can we do to stop them?

    @anthonyirvin9522@anthonyirvin9522Ай бұрын
  • Is this a video or a podcast ?

    @edwardfletcher7790@edwardfletcher7790 Жыл бұрын
    • Yes

      @Anne_Ony_Mouse@Anne_Ony_Mouse Жыл бұрын
  • How long before all the ice melts? Ans: We don't live to get a chance to see it.

    @EveryoneHarmonyPeace@EveryoneHarmonyPeace8 ай бұрын
  • You guys messed up. I don't understand why you start showing video footage and then cut it off with the wavy graphic.

    @meister-t@meister-t11 ай бұрын
  • Could you show a Map of greenland without the ice??? Thx . Greetings from Brussels 🙂🇪🇺

    @marinaclarasanchezsuarez2905@marinaclarasanchezsuarez290511 ай бұрын
  • Apparently it was by the year 2000, and every 2 years since

    @nedzero1284@nedzero128411 ай бұрын
    • transphobe

      @lw1zfog@lw1zfog9 ай бұрын
    • ​@@lw1zfogclimate cultist lol

      @joshwalters3148@joshwalters31482 ай бұрын
  • You should do a study on ice ages and their cycles. That would be interesting.

    @simonsauter3229@simonsauter3229 Жыл бұрын
    • It might open up their thinking a bit. But I doubt it.

      @anthonydoyle7370@anthonydoyle7370 Жыл бұрын
    • probably more truth in that then climate change

      @truthhurts5158@truthhurts5158 Жыл бұрын
    • @@anthonydoyle7370 AAAHAHAHAHAHHA I think the world's climate scientists from many different countries with post doc degrees already know plenty about ice ages , dummy.

      @SteffiReitsch@SteffiReitsch Жыл бұрын
    • Do you scientists like Jason don’t do that?

      @qbas81@qbas81 Жыл бұрын
    • That historical work has been done. Polar ice Cores have been taken and the data recorded. The science is way ahead of you and has been available for decades FYI.

      @solarwind907@solarwind907 Жыл бұрын
  • Greenland is a contributer to sea level rise. The floating Arctic ice cap is more critical. The ice cap keeps the Arctic Ocean cold. Once the ice cap is gone the ocean will warm releasing CH4 and CO2 from the methane hydrates and permafrost. Melting Greenland ice and Antarctic ice faster.

    @dan2304@dan2304 Жыл бұрын
    • I did a model I put sand in bucket and water around it. Than I added ice that raised the water level. When the ice melt the water volume leval stayed the same. So to say the sea will rise is a lie.

      @Nathan-ry3yu@Nathan-ry3yu11 ай бұрын
    • @@Nathan-ry3yu Yes true, floating is as in the Arctic will not raise sea level. But once the ice is gone the Arctic Ocean will warm rapidly releasing lots of methane and carbon dioxide accelerating warming. Continental ice like Greenland (3 km thick sitting on rock) and Antarctica will raise sea level tens of metres.

      @dan2304@dan230411 ай бұрын
    • @@Nathan-ry3yu What your saying is almost true but there is thermal expansion plus latent heat effect, also, no ice, no albedo and is some shallow parts of the arctic ocean the clathrate hydrate could melt releasing methane.

      @delta40031@delta4003111 ай бұрын
    • Loss of albedo from the Arctic ice sheet will be catastrophic

      @freeheeler09@freeheeler0911 ай бұрын
    • As of this week Canada's forest is on fire due to an unprecedented heat wave.Another feedback loop that pushes temperatures even higher/faster.

      @tr7b410@tr7b41011 ай бұрын
  • "Flow of hot rocks rising from the Earth's core beneath central Greenland is melting the ice from below and contributing to sea-level rise, study finds"

    @jansoltes971@jansoltes971 Жыл бұрын
  • Due to the sci ne also of freezing in the freezer and icicles making, we could use techniques to rebuild the lost glacier of Iceland and use ln2 and advanced freezing techniques to refrozen mass amounts of our world water, take form the ocean,freezer and place in ice caps of the planet

    @mikeohawk95@mikeohawk954 ай бұрын
  • The snow and ice on the Greenland Ice sheet has been melting forever that is why it is not reaching the sky. This show is scaremongering for the oceans to rise a meter water would have to be stored on all the land mass to the height of two meters, this is due to the land covering about half the area of the oceans. Imagine Australia would have to hold two meters of water over its entire area, this would need to be repeated on all the continents for the sea to rise a meter.

    @elliotlambert3817@elliotlambert381711 ай бұрын
  • Thanks for the subject from France... I share...

    @rickebuschcatherine2729@rickebuschcatherine27299 ай бұрын
  • So long as it's floating ice it doesn't matter at all to first country nations. Greenland, however is very important to Northern Nations.

    @sundancer442@sundancer44211 ай бұрын
    • Get two classes and a ruler. Fill one with ice water and the other with rock and water and ice on top of the rock. Measure the difference. The ice water doesn’t change. The rock and water rises in level.

      @valorienapoletana4063@valorienapoletana40639 ай бұрын
  • Why without video?

    @mahmutkolukfaki@mahmutkolukfaki8 ай бұрын
  • yes global warming is just ONE of the many environmental issues we face- always look at the big picture!

    @markschuette3770@markschuette3770 Жыл бұрын
  • We're done for. And we deserve it.

    @EmeraldView@EmeraldView Жыл бұрын
    • Some of us do, some of us don't. The people most affected are the ones who deserve it the least. Those who are the main cause will be able to buy their way out of problems.

      @Herkimer_Snerd@Herkimer_Snerd Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@Herkimer_Snerd...and go where, ultimately?

      @belladonnatook8851@belladonnatook8851 Жыл бұрын
    • So correcto Belladona. A change of atmosphere is ELE. And It Will happen kickly with the methane permafrost.... Clouds of methane(?) When(?)

      @marinaclarasanchezsuarez2905@marinaclarasanchezsuarez2905 Жыл бұрын
  • Current Doubling Rates suggest a much faster rise in sea level during the 2100s...but that should be avoidable I guess. But if not, then all ice melted by 2200's is my guess.

    @Peoples_Republic_of_Cotati@Peoples_Republic_of_Cotati5 ай бұрын
  • Could they make White inflatable pillows to anchor over the algae blooms to kill them off and keep the ice from melting so fast?

    @certiPHIer@certiPHIer Жыл бұрын
    • How much CO2 would we need to emit to produce and install those pillows? What do we do with those innumerable pillows once we do not need them anymore? Let them float the oceans to create the next disaster? We are not even capable of handling our day-to-day waste properly.

      @thiemokellner1893@thiemokellner1893 Жыл бұрын
    • Ice melting is a good thing......these people are lying to you.

      @joshwalters3148@joshwalters31482 ай бұрын
  • Why upgrading Infrastructure and related technologies, matters. Besides, we need the practice for developing underwater Cities.

    @danielpalos@danielpalos9 ай бұрын
  • Well considering it's night for about 6 months in the artic circle... The answer is never., But keep trolling us.

    @dfinlen@dfinlen11 ай бұрын
  • wonder what they would say now after the hottest summer and Antarctica sea ice is broken

    @frinoffrobis@frinoffrobis7 ай бұрын
  • Would be interesting to know why at geological levels current co2 levels should have seen a 10m rise already as stated in your article. But after stating no explanation given? Is it anthropomorphic effects? e.g happening so fast and accelerating away so well get some phase transition and a mega sunami?

    @kevinowen3702@kevinowen37027 ай бұрын
    • It's because latent heat infusion. You need 334J to melt 1 gram of ice at 0°C. It's a lot of energy. Now we reached latent heat the tipping point. And most of energy goes into heating the ocean. Most of ice is gone. It's new thin ice what we have. Also - you only need 15% of area covered with ice to count it as "Ice cover".

      @anaoha999@anaoha9997 ай бұрын
    • ​@@anaoha999good to know. Wetland feedback cycle will be tough to stop

      @DrSmooth2000@DrSmooth20007 ай бұрын
    • @@DrSmooth2000 we don't have technology to stop any feedback loops.

      @anaoha999@anaoha9997 ай бұрын
    • @@anaoha999 could have done the sulfur to stratosphere with 1930s tech if had wanted to. That's the only Gengineer idea that will be widely done.

      @DrSmooth2000@DrSmooth20007 ай бұрын
  • I'd like to drop a go-pro camera down that ice river.

    @frankstone3809@frankstone38099 ай бұрын
  • It's a video of a radio program, unusual nowadays.

    @grindupBaker@grindupBaker Жыл бұрын
  • Not liking the background constantly flowing past. Show the actual pictures of the trip! Thanks!

    @annbenson5431@annbenson543111 ай бұрын
  • Why is the video part of this blocked??????

    @kimiikins@kimiikins Жыл бұрын
    • It's propoganda.....who cares

      @joshwalters3148@joshwalters31482 ай бұрын
  • The estimate as to when all of the ice melts. Doesn't mean the ice caps are not melting. The subsidence of land is not as significant as the ocean level rising as the polar ice caps melt. .

    @markcampbell7577@markcampbell7577 Жыл бұрын
    • Arctic Sea Ice melting only makes a very very small contribution to SLR (and only because of salinity difference). What will be very significant is when we run out of sea ice up there and the heat has to go somewhere else.

      @Timlagor@Timlagor8 ай бұрын
  • 14,000 years ago the ic sheet was 2 miles deep covering north american Let melt ,.

    @Talksin403@Talksin40328 күн бұрын
  • I'm just wondering why that fresh water isn't being used for something yet by someone

    @kiedranFan2035@kiedranFan2035 Жыл бұрын
    • The water may be free but the shipping will kill you. Think about it.

      @solarwind907@solarwind907 Жыл бұрын
    • They have a hydro electric generator for the south end of Greenland.

      @randydyck9353@randydyck9353 Жыл бұрын
    • Notwithstanding the fact that we have no idea what microbiomes, or whatever, may being released and may carry what potential diseases...

      @belladonnatook8851@belladonnatook8851 Жыл бұрын
    • @@solarwind907 It won't take much time when fresh water will be more expensive than gold. Spain, e.g., is craving already for fresh water and it is not even summer yet.

      @thiemokellner1893@thiemokellner1893 Жыл бұрын
  • For anyone that cares, the union of concerned scientists is a good source for climate science related facts.

    @solarwind907@solarwind907 Жыл бұрын
    • Facts is a strong word. You should call them what they are, climate related prophecies. Made by snake oil prophets who only get money from the government if they report there is a crisis.

      @CarterCalhoun-lu7ld@CarterCalhoun-lu7ld4 ай бұрын
  • Drinking water 🚰 to collect + make portable hydroelectric turbines . All before it goes to the sea now. 🌊 Melting happens every year ...In Canada 🇨🇦 as well

    @sarahsokal@sarahsokal Жыл бұрын
  • Look at the dark dust on the ice. Thats the reason why ice melts much faster when the sun shines on it.

    @saschaesken5524@saschaesken55242 ай бұрын
  • Why take camera's to record the helicopter landing on the ice and then turn them off after 5 seconds? *A picture paints a thousand words, moving pictures even more so.*

    @warbledurbler7905@warbledurbler79052 ай бұрын
  • As a climate change activist i think a lot of the media is really sensationalizing so much of the climate issue

    @sew_gal7340@sew_gal734011 ай бұрын
    • You are correct ...and you are also playing a part in it as an activist The whole issue has been sensationalized and politicised

      @oftin_wong@oftin_wong11 ай бұрын
    • Troll.

      @argoneonoble@argoneonoble11 ай бұрын
    • Andy F has a hockey stick to sell you.

      @lw1zfog@lw1zfog9 ай бұрын
    • As a scientist, I can assure you they’re SEVERELY underestimating the problem.

      @valorienapoletana4063@valorienapoletana40639 ай бұрын
  • And no mention of the 100 meters of snow since 1942 when planes had to land in Greenland, that's where they are now. No mention that all predictions of an ice free Arctic have failed. This year a massive Russian icebreaker had to take the Suez canal to get to Kamchatka because the ice was too thick for it to break through in July near Siberia..

    @MountainFisher@MountainFisher8 ай бұрын
  • Where I live the climate is more cool than it is warm I don’t know if I want it to be any colder that’s for sure!!

    @KBParrots@KBParrots11 ай бұрын
    • In Arkansas we have had 105-106 degree temperatures every single day for almost 3 weeks in a row. It is brutal.

      @superbwater78@superbwater789 ай бұрын
    • @@superbwater78 this heat wave soon pass.

      @KBParrots@KBParrots9 ай бұрын
  • Why can,t they tell the world the real reason why the ice is melting in Greenland and the Antarctica this all started back in 1995 .when the poles shifted position the earth tilted changing the core of the earth to put more pressure on the mantle which over the past 30 years has become thinner in certain parts of the earth the core of the earth is spinning faster than usual that's the reason there have been so many volcanic eruptions and earthquakes .the earth has grown larger and is releasing it's pressure.there are 140 active volcanoes on the west coast of the Antarctica .and there are big lakes under Greenland heated by the thin mantle.and how many other undersea volcanos are there.climate change has nothing to do with humans or cows.the cause of the problem is from within it,s just one big coverup.best wishes and greetings from iceland.

    @VincentAHSteed@VincentAHSteed Жыл бұрын
    • danish scientists say no , greenalnd is not melting

      @bonysminiatures3123@bonysminiatures3123 Жыл бұрын
    • LOL What a load of baloney. There are now, and have been for at least several decades, approximately 45 - 50 volcanic eruptions every year. Point two there aren't 140 active volcanoes in ALL of Antarctica, never mind just the west coast. Currently, as of this week there's about 3 that are actively erupting. I don't know which conspiracy theory you grabbed this from, or whether you made it up yourself. but it is COMPLETELY false.

      @jimthain8777@jimthain8777 Жыл бұрын
  • This is great and informative program, but what has happened with video?

    @qbas81@qbas81 Жыл бұрын
  • Anyone notice that most scientists say it will be 1000 years. Eco anxiety destroys young peoples lives. Still looking for that sea with a slope. Want to go water skiing.

    @robindumpleton3742@robindumpleton374210 ай бұрын
  • If BBC says so then it must be true, they never lie. 🤣

    @drake000666@drake00066611 ай бұрын
    • Exactly. It's not like they're globalist-controlled propaganda or anything.

      @CarterCalhoun-lu7ld@CarterCalhoun-lu7ld4 ай бұрын
  • would be nice to see what's going on. a lot of audible not a lots of video

    @mysticody@mysticody5 ай бұрын
  • Flying from Chicago to Korea for a major part of the journey every time I looked out the window there was nothing but ice, literally hours of nothing but ice. Frankly it was a bit horrifying imagining being stuck in the middle of all that ice. I'm in my 60's and while I accept that we're witnessing the last of the most recent ice age and that it may be getting pushed along due to human activity, I very much doubt my great grandchildren will live to see the day when all that ice is melted.

    @pakde8002@pakde800211 ай бұрын
    • we need you to fly back to Chicago to tell us what you see now

      @EarthDragonSuperSaiyanGoku@EarthDragonSuperSaiyanGoku11 ай бұрын
    • I have no doubts all the ice will melt in less than 20 years. The heat waves are getting so bad up in Canada and Switzerland. The poles are heating extremely fast. The ice has been melting much faster than predictions from 20 years ago. Ya folks, 20 years, it will all melt, the oceans will be dying and it will be too late.

      @DS-zl4up@DS-zl4up11 ай бұрын
    • I am 74 and having my health problems but at the rate of Arctic ice loss I may see the Arctic Ocean ice free. We are talking about the Arctic Ocean not the land. Each year there is less ice to melt and more heat available to melt it, so each year a greater percentage of the Arctic Ocean ice is lost, an accelerating cycle.

      @dan2304@dan230411 ай бұрын
    • @@dan2304 I’m meaning land. In 20 years it will all melt away. Google Clathrate Gun Hypothesis, I believe we will be in a massive wakeup call soon. No one is discussing the runaway methane gas. Get ready 👉

      @DS-zl4up@DS-zl4up11 ай бұрын
    • I am 71 and have spent a large portion of my life working in the north. To me, the catastrophe is so obvious that to not see it, you must have your head where the sun don’t shine.

      @jayleeper1512@jayleeper151211 ай бұрын
  • Ice melted during the Medieval Warm Period, then advanced during the Little Ice Age. People did not have gasoline cars back then.

    @commonsense1907@commonsense19073 ай бұрын
  • How long before all the ice melts? You are reminding me of the Tootsie Pop owl. Just pick it up and drink it. Had I known this is what you intended, I'd have found another date.

    @josephdonais4778@josephdonais477811 ай бұрын
  • How long till u can't step foot there or in Alaska or Canada .there saying permafrost is as thick as 100 meters in places it's all going to liquify

    @yodad4776@yodad477611 ай бұрын
  • How long is a string 👍🤔😉😉😉😉

    @prancer4743@prancer47438 ай бұрын
  • Time to watch the movie Waterworld once again.

    @amyrichard3203@amyrichard3203 Жыл бұрын
  • Beautiful looking doc, unfortunately poor audio with lots of background chatter and noise!

    @normmelanson9318@normmelanson931811 ай бұрын
    • This is live sound caption not studio soundproof caption. get real

      @alexpert@alexpert11 ай бұрын
  • This is WILD I'm learning a lot and increasing my existential dread LOL (I refuse to give in to Doomerism but I do hope we figure this thing out) Would love to know more about those ice algae. Sounds fascinating and unusual.

    @lowwastehighmelanin@lowwastehighmelanin10 ай бұрын
    • “I do hope we will figure this out” Not to rain on your parade, but how will that be achieved?

      @tubecated_development@tubecated_development9 ай бұрын
    • The scientists make the doomers look like unprepared children playing with Lego’s and sparklers. It’s far worse than you can imagine… we’re scientifically at energy equivalent to 3 KT extinction meteors imparted into the oceans.

      @valorienapoletana4063@valorienapoletana40639 ай бұрын
    • @@tubecated_development We know all we need to. The problem is that we can't stop our rulers supporting fossil fuel consumption.

      @Timlagor@Timlagor8 ай бұрын
    • It's not just algae. As the ice melts back ash from volcanoes, forest fires and even meteoric material, matter that obviously doesn't melt, accumulates into a single layer which darkens the surface thus helping the ice column to absorb more of the Sun's heat. It is a runaway process that can only be stopped by very cold temperatures which can only happen if we swab the atmosphere of its added human-produced greenhouse gases.

      @bluegold21@bluegold218 ай бұрын
    • There is nothing going on with the climate to be concerned about or whatever nonsense scientists can cook up to get funding. Worry about real things like reducing the power of the governments which are currently ruining our prosperity and causing death and destruction from viruses and wars.

      @outofcompliance1639@outofcompliance16395 ай бұрын
  • Where is the picture???? Wtf?!

    @marvinmartin4692@marvinmartin46925 ай бұрын
  • When all the ice has melted what melts next?

    @public.public@public.public11 ай бұрын
  • i saw the ice in this video like a rainbow, the color is yellow and green, this is audio

    @hombrepobre9646@hombrepobre9646 Жыл бұрын
  • Sorry to say this, but your graphic between pictures and clips it is anoying and I gust skiped after 5 mins to where are pictures and clips,

    @vixu_xivu@vixu_xivu8 ай бұрын
  • Extraordinary to think that just in the last 30 or 40 years we've committed our descendants to centuries of sea level rise, and for what? A small minority of the world's population have had a nice time burning up cheap energy, but for the most part, at least in the UK, little has changed in terms of better insulated houses, better quality of life, transport etc, if anything we've gone backwards in the past few years. Climate action is also about more comfortable insulated homes, better public transport, walkable cities, higher investment in infrastructure and more jobs. It's tragically upside down.

    @nickfosterxx@nickfosterxx Жыл бұрын
    • Extraordinary sea level is up 400ft since the end of the Ice Age over the past 18,000 years and you are whining about another inch.

      @donaldkasper8346@donaldkasper8346 Жыл бұрын
    • There has been far higher levels of co2 in earth's history. Mankind's contribution is tiny by comparison.

      @adrianrouse5148@adrianrouse5148 Жыл бұрын
    • @@adrianrouse5148 In earth’s history. Not in mankind’s.

      @christinearmington@christinearmington Жыл бұрын
    • Sea level has been rising for more than 12,000 years; when the sea level was 400 feet lower. Do some additional research.

      @gregkramer8016@gregkramer801611 ай бұрын
  • We're about 2.6 million years into the Quaternary Ice Age, which might last 100 million years. We are in the 45th interglacial (a brief, slightly warmer) period. The cold will return. But even this warm spell today is not far from the coldest range Earth has ever been. Nevertheless, ignore the geological record, adopt an emotionally-potent oversimplification, and blame donaldtrumpdioxide. Thanks BBC.

    @xyzct@xyzct Жыл бұрын
    • So far this year there’s been record ice gain ,and it’s only end off October

      @christopher554@christopher5546 ай бұрын
  • Good work. A bit frustrating not being able to see what’s going on, phone footage would be fine.

    @booms7258@booms7258 Жыл бұрын
  • Knowing when money unlocks from wallet, other sources like locking period , maturity of Fixed deposits and Mutual funds etc

    @unknown51899@unknown518998 ай бұрын
  • At least, the melting of Greenland may be helping to maintain the somewhat fresher surface layer in the Arctic. (or maybe this fresh water is swept into the Atlantic and doesn't help at all). If the fresher surface layer was to disappear, the Arctic ocean could not freeze every winter and produce the brine which is part of the AMOC. With rising air over the Arctic happening more often, creating anti-clockwise air circulation, the floating ice and fresher water is diverted by coriolis away from the centre of the circulation and expelled from the Arctic. One wonders what would happen with a drought in northern lands around the arctic, with rivers no longer refreshing this layer. So many factors to consider adding and subtracting from each other

    @wlhgmk@wlhgmk Жыл бұрын
  • BBC needs to look at what's going on in this upload. Most of it is a voice with a flowing blue and yellow graphic design. Take it down. Fix it.

    @ziziroberts8041@ziziroberts8041 Жыл бұрын
  • As long as Earth the Sun and Moon keeps in orbit eras will be our seasonal normal.

    @saralopera2849@saralopera28495 ай бұрын
  • Exponential growth we talked about in school. The quantum leap. We have heard it said that the experts are surprised by sudden earth changes. Cannot say I know a time frame of it all melting, but believing they know is also not realistic.Too many variables.

    @larrypilcher3791@larrypilcher37915 ай бұрын
  • When will it melt ??? Don't know nobody kept records the last time it happened. Nobody knows the speed or ins and outs of the warming cycle.

    @adrianrouse5148@adrianrouse5148 Жыл бұрын
  • We humans have already altered known natural weather patterns, but nature will fight back. The next generations will have to adapt to a different world, less predictable and more aggressive.

    @fabiodeoliveiraribeiro1602@fabiodeoliveiraribeiro1602 Жыл бұрын
    • No adapting to a dead planet

      @Jc-ms5vv@Jc-ms5vv Жыл бұрын
    • @@Jc-ms5vv the planet won't die.

      @ia8018@ia8018 Жыл бұрын
    • @@ia8018 not till the sun explodes but it will become uninhabitable and possibly turn into another Venus

      @Jc-ms5vv@Jc-ms5vv Жыл бұрын
    • @@Jc-ms5vv While that is possible it would take a LOT more warming than we are currently producing. However, we would eventually get there if we keep going like we have been.

      @jimthain8777@jimthain8777 Жыл бұрын
    • @@jimthain8777 to become uninhabitable or turn into Venus? It’s already becoming uninhabitable and we wont be here to see if it turns into Venus

      @Jc-ms5vv@Jc-ms5vv Жыл бұрын
  • Tell me why sea levels are the same everywhere?

    @eforde2@eforde2 Жыл бұрын
  • I think I would prefer a still photo of ice or something, maybe a map. The weird waves are making me think the video is broken.

    @WobbigongSoundSystem@WobbigongSoundSystem11 ай бұрын
    • Same. Watching this kind of video (radio) I just put this on my counter while cooking or brushing my teeth and listen to it. It is quite annoying when you wanna see what is the scene or footage instead of seeing a video but it is really just a radio.

      @okwatever3582@okwatever358211 ай бұрын
  • Antarctica is getting colder

    @nirprizant4228@nirprizant4228 Жыл бұрын
  • It is minus 80 degrees in places on this planet and that will never melt.

    @cat793cdumpy@cat793cdumpy10 ай бұрын
  • Nice topic, but please show more of the interviews and other video. The graphic is ok, but very annoying.

    @IowaStrmChsr@IowaStrmChsr Жыл бұрын
    • If they had video evidence, they'd show it. But they don't, so they can't.

      @arsemyth8920@arsemyth892011 ай бұрын
  • So let me get this straight? You as a reporter flew out to talk to scientists which you could have done via the internet and actually provided more footage than you did! Then jumped on a helicopter ride only to capture a few minutes of footage of ice melting, which you could have easily obtained from tons of stock footage! All while more than 80% of the world has never seen the inside of an aeroplane... Could this kind of reporting be any more ignorant of the problem?

    @George-ed5wj@George-ed5wj11 ай бұрын
  • Great wallpaper. Several dubious claims. Still, I gave it a like.

    @ronaldgarrison8478@ronaldgarrison8478 Жыл бұрын
KZhead