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Antarctica at risk of ‘abrupt changes’ that could have catastrophic consequences

Adam Morton

Adam Morton

Antarctica could undergo abrupt and potentially irreversible changes that have catastrophic consequences unless urgent action is taken to cut greenhouse gas emissions, according to a review by 21 Australian and international scientists.

Published in the journal Nature, the review of published Antarctic science found changes facing the southern continent were interlinked and putting pressure on the global climate, sea level and ecosystems.

It highlights several risks, including:

  • The “severe risk” that the West Antarctic Ice Sheet could collapse. If that happened, it could raise sea levels by more than three metres and threaten coastal cities and communities across the world.

  • The accelerating disappearance of sea ice floating in the ocean around Antarctica. This has a range of knock-on effects, including worsening warming by increasing the amount of solar heat retained in the ocean and increasing the risk that species that rely on the ice, such as emperor penguins, could go extinct.

  • The potential rapid slowdown of the Southern Ocean overturning circulation, which could alter the world’s climate for centuries. Among other changes, it would mean vital nutrients stay at the seafloor instead of being recirculated back to the surface, where biological systems depend on them.

Dr Nerilie Abram, the chief scientist at the Australian Antarctic Division and the study’s lead author, said:

The only way to avoid further abrupt changes and their far-reaching impacts is to reduce greenhouse gas emissions fast enough to limit global warming to as close to 1.5C as possible.

Governments, businesses and communities will need to factor in these abrupt Antarctic changes that are being observed now into future planning for climate change impacts, including in Australia.

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Adam Morton

Adam Morton

Aemo says demand for large-scale energy generation to grow by 21% over next decade

The Australian Energy Market Operator (Aemo) has released its annual report on the investments needed to ensure the national electricity grid remains reliable for the next decade.

It found the outlook had improved from a year ago –assuming all expected investments in new generation, storage and transmission connections that have been promised are delivered on time and in full.

Aemo’s chief executive, Daniel Westerman, said the report showed “the 10-year investment pipeline to manage energy reliability is healthy”. But he said the large number of electricity stations due to retire over the next decade – 11GW worth, nearly all of it coal power – meant the “timely delivery” of new infrastructure was critical.

Photograph: David Gray/Reuters

The operator is forecasting demand for large-scale electricity generation will increase by 21% over the next decade, mainly due to “the rapid expansion of data centres, accelerating business electrification and the broader inclusion of prospective industrial energy users”.

It said a “small reliability gap” of 80MW was forecast in Queensland this summer due to “reduced generator availability, higher forecasts of maximum demand and delayed project commissioning”, and warned capacity would be needed to cover this.

A larger reliability gap of 390MW is forecast in South Australia next financial year if the Torrens Island B gas plant retires as previously planned – but the modelling did not consider a recent in-principle agreement to extend the generator’s life for two years.



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