Ice Sheets Are Telling Us 1.5°C Isn’t Safe Enough!
New research warns that even the international target of limiting global warming to 1.5°C is not enough to prevent devastating sea level rise.
A groundbreaking study published in Communications Earth and Environment by Prof. Chris Stokes and colleagues, has delivered a sobering message: even the internationally agreed safe limit of 1.5°C could lead to catastrophic sea level rise, with devastating impacts for coastal populations around the world.
Instead, the study suggests the real safe limit for ice sheet stability may be closer to just 1.0°C above pre-industrial levels – a threshold we’ve already passed.
Key Findings from the Study:
🧊 1.5°C is not safe for ice sheets. Current warming levels (~1.2°C) are already pushing ice sheets past their breaking point. Even if temperatures do not increase further, we’re locked into several metres of sea level rise over the coming centuries.
⚠️ Tipping points are being crossed now. Parts of West Antarctica and Greenland may already be in irreversible retreat, with ice loss that could become unstoppable regardless of future climate action.
📈 Accelerating rise rates. By the end of this century, sea levels could be rising by 10 mm per year (compared to today’s 4mm/year) – faster than most nations can adapt.
🌊 Massive long-term consequences. A 12-meter sea level rise could unfold if collapse thresholds are passed, affecting over 1 billion people living less than 10 meters above current sea level.
💰 Near-term economic impact. Just 20 cm of rise by 2050 could cause $1 trillion per year in damages across the world’s 136 largest coastal cities.
Global Health and Social Risks:
Rising sea levels driven by polar ice sheet loss are expected to trigger mass inland migration, particularly from low-lying developing countries such as Bangladesh and small island states. This large-scale displacement will disrupt coastal health systems, increasing the risk of disease outbreaks due to overcrowding, water contamination, and loss of habitable environments. In addition, food and water security will be severely threatened, especially in densely populated urban coastal slums and vulnerable agricultural deltas, putting millions at heightened risk of hunger, malnutrition, and waterborne illnesses.
The study reveals that the true safe limit for global temperature is +1.0°C or lower, conditions that existed in the 1980s when ice sheets were largely stable. This reinforces urgent calls to go beyond the Paris Agreement and target cooler-than-current temperatures to avoid irreversible damage.
What can be done?
The authors urge world leaders to adopt the precautionary principle, accelerate emissions cuts, and invest in adaptive infrastructure. Given the catastrophic consequences, we cannot afford to gamble with ice sheet stability.
Stay informed. Polar change is shaping the future of every coastline and every community.
Feature image: Antarctica’s contribution to future sea level with+ 1.5 °C warming scenario versus a scenario with no additional warming after 2020.
The blue area shows a range of sea level rise predictions if global warming reaches 1.5°C, with the black line showing the middle estimate. The red dashed line shows sea level rise if temperatures stay at 2020 levels but include marine ice cliff instability (MICI) – a process of rapid ice collapse. The black dashed line shows the same 2020 scenario without MICI, demonstrating how much worse outcomes could be with unstable ice dynamics. Credit: Stokes et.al, 2025.
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