Climate change effects usually become clear over decades and centuries, but they seem to be everywhere this summer: temperature records broken constantly, ocean waters as warm as hot tubs and world leaders so alarmed they've called this the "the era of global boiling."
And as concerning as these developments are, scientists have long worried about even more dramatic, looming and irreversible changes to the planet that could happen quickly. Even in the past year, there's evidence some of these scenarios are becoming more likely.
A paper in the journal Science in 2022 looked at several climate "tipping points" – conditions beyond which changes become self-perpetuating and difficult or impossible to undo. While the concept raised the hackles of some scientists, who suggested it was overly simplistic, the paper suggested even the possibility of such no-going-back points provided compelling reasons to limit warming as much as possible.
About a year later, several global systems that scientists have been concerned about are showing signs of becoming increasingly fragile.
Antarctic sea ice is at a record low, fires in Canada are reshaping terrain and polluting the air and record ocean temperatures are threatening coral. There's even new research published in July that suggests critical Atlantic Ocean currents could collapse sooner than expected, which could trigger rapid weather and climate changes.
But the news isn't all bad: There's some good news in the Amazon. And scientists continue to say that if humanity takes climate threats seriously and quickly moves to end carbon emissions, the scenarios below become less likely or at least less extreme.
Here are five tipping points scientists say could start to teeter sooner rather than later:
As of July 18, Antarctic sea ice was more than 1 million square miles below the 1981-2010 average. That's an area larger than the seven southwestern states, including Utah and Texas, according to the National Snow and Ice Data Center. It is also more than half a million square miles lower than last year, which had also been the previous record low.
In Greenland, temperatures over the country's central-north ice sheet between 2001 and 2011 were the warmest in the past 1,000 years, said Maria Hörhold, a glaciologist at the Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research in Germany and author of a study published this year.
The Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC), a large system of ocean currents that carry warm water from the tropics into the North Atlantic, could collapse by the middle of the century, or possibly any time from 2025 onward, because of human-caused climate change, a study published last week suggests.
It's far from certain and many scientists say there's not enough data yet to tell if there's a trend that could mean a sudden collapse is in the offing.
As temperatures rise and droughts become more common, the ability of the forest to grow back after fires or logging is of concern. That's especially a problem in the Amazon where the trees themselves capture water through their roots and then release moisture back through their leaves. It's estimated a single tree can emit 265 gallons of water a day.
If drought or logging kills trees there may not be enough left to bring water to the area, meaning what grows back in their place would instead be grassland.
Forests have always burned but what's happening now is on a different scale, in every part of the country, said Marc-André Parisien, a research scientist with the Canadian Forest Service.
This summer has been a historically bad fire season in Canada. As of August 4, a remarkable 1,054 active fires were burning, according to the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre.
While boreal forests are highly adapted to wildfires, the climate in the forested areas is now hotter and windier than before, making it harder for the seedlings to reestablish themselves. The concern is that in some areas what grows back after these megafires might not be today's endless forests but instead grassland and shrubland, interspersed with smaller areas of trees.
"The climate in the northern forests has always been changing since the end of the Ice Age," Parisien said. "But just the sheer speed at which things are happening now is surprising."
Coral reefs can survive within only a relatively narrow temperature band. The coral that build the reefs get much of their food from algae living in their tissues. When the seawater is too warm, the coral’s stress response is to expel algae, causing the coral to turn white. The process is called coral bleaching, and if it lasts too long, the coral can starve – turning a thriving ecosystem into a cemetery of dead, white shells.
The Coral Restoration Foundation, a group centered around restoring and protecting Florida's coral reefs, said it visited the Sombrero Reef off the Florida Keys on July 20 and found "100% coral mortality." The discovery means all corals on the Sombrero Reef, a popular snorkeling area, have died and the reef will not recover on its own without active restoration, the foundation said.
Even though it appears humanity is on track to miss the United Nations' hoped-for limit of a temperature rise ofno more than 1.5 degrees Celsius, giving up is not the answer, said Anthony Leiserowitz, director of the Yale Program on Climate Change Communication.
No specific number signifies that all hope is lost. Instead, it's a call for action.
"It's not like we fall off the edge of the world," he said. “We can still make a big difference and every single tenth of a degree is enormously important.”
Contributing: Doyle Rice, Emily DeLetter, Dinah Voyles Pulver
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