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New study suggests that atmospheric warming could significantly weaken polar ice shelves

October 29th, 2025

New research suggests that summer meltwater running beneath glaciers in Greenland can significantly boost melting at their base. This challenges the widely held view that ocean temperature alone drives ice shelf melting and highlights how atmospheric warming could weaken polar ice shelves.

The findings are based on high-resolution modelling by an international team of researchers, including Tore Hattermann from the iC3 Polar Research Hub in Tromsø. The study focused on the Petermann Ice Shelf, a floating extension of a glacier pushing downhill into the sea. 

Like other ice shelves, the Petermann Ice Shelf acts as a brake on the land-based glacier behind it. If the ice shelf thins or breaks up, the glacier’s movement could accelerate, accelerating global sea level rise.

Figure: A graphical summary of the results showing basal melt rate (mb), and its drivers, namely, thermal driving (ΔT) and friction velocity (u*). The discharge type categories correspond to the experiment design. Credit: Prakash et al. (2025), Nature Communication.

A shift in how melting happens

Using a detailed 3-D model of the Petermann Ice Shelf and fjord, the team simulated different climate scenarios. They found that when subglacial discharge is low or absent, heat is carried beneath the ice mainly by slow-moving ocean currents. As discharge increases, a tipping point is reached: extra energy no longer comes from ocean heat but from turbulence generated by fast-flowing meltwater.

“This marks a regime change,” explains Tore Hattermann. “Once subglacial discharge passes a certain level, melt is limited not by ocean heat but by how quickly that heat can be transferred to the ice—and the meltwater flow speeds that up.”

In the model, turbulent mixing concentrates in long, narrow channels at the ice shelf’s base, creating areas of high shear stress and melt rates of up to 180 metres per year—seven times higher than under ocean-only melt conditions.

Modelling future scenarios

The researchers ran model experiments under a high-emissions scenario. They found that even if ocean warming levels off, continued atmospheric warming would increase subglacial discharge and accelerate melting. 

Within a decade, basal channels could cut through the ice shelf, compromising its integrity. This weakening would reduce resistance to inland ice flow, leading to faster glacier movement and more sea-level rise.

Why this matters

Petermann is one of the last remaining floating ice tongues in northern Greenland. Its location makes it crucial for regulating ice flow from a Greenland ice sheet sector that holds enough ice to raise sea levels by an additional four metres.

Previous studies focused mainly on ocean temperatures when assessing ice shelf vulnerability. This research shows that atmospheric warming—and its effect on summer meltwater runoff—may pose an even more immediate threat. 

The findings from Greenland also have implications for Antarctic ice shelves, many of which feature similar channel systems and may experience discharge-driven melt in a warming world. Understanding how meltwater interacts with ice shelf geometry is critical for projecting future sea-level rise.

About the paper and the authors

The study Enhanced subglacial discharge amplifies Petermann Ice Shelf melting when ocean thermal forcing saturates was published in Nature Communications and is available open access.

Lead author Abhay Prakash is a postdoctoral researcher at Stockholm University. iC3 Polar Research Hub’s Tore Hattermann contributed to the study. 

Tore is a researcher at the Norwegian Polar Institute and at the Department of Geosciences at UiT The Arctic University of Norway. His research focuses on ocean-ice interactions in polar regions. He is particularly interested in how physical processes at the ice-ocean boundary affect ice shelf stability and sea-level rise.

Department for Geosciences UiT The Arctic University of Norway Dramsvegen 201 9010, Tromsø Norway

Dr Terri Souster

iC3 Centre Manager

ic3manager@uit.no

Till Bruckner

Communications Advisor

till.d.bruckner@uit.no

iC3: Centre for ice, Cryosphere, Carbon and Climate is funded by the Research Council of Norway through its Centres of Excellence funding scheme, grant number 332635.

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