Long-term effects of global warming


There are expected to be various long-term effects of global warming. Most discussion and research, including that by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change reports, concentrates on the effects of global warming up to 2100, with only an outline of the effects beyond this.

Ice loss and sea level rise

from melting ice sheets and glacier retreat contributes to a rise in the future sea level.

Antarctica

Concern has been expressed about the stability of the West Antarctic ice sheet. In 2002 Vaughan & Spouge argued that the "WAIS most likely will not collapse in the next few centuries." In an inaugural article for members of the National Academy of Sciences elected in 2005, Timothy Lenton and others suggest that a collapse of the West Antarctic ice sheet could occur within a millennium. Specifically, they state "Although the timescale is highly uncertain, a qualitative WAIS change could occur within this millennium, with collapse within 300 years being a worst-case scenario. Rapid sea-level rise is more likely to come from the WAIS than from the Greenland ice sheet.". A study in 2015 found that assuming cumulative fossil fuel emissions of 10 000 gigatonnes of carbon, the Antarctic Ice Sheet could melt completely over the following millennia, contributing 58 m to global sea-level rise, and 30 m within the first 1000 years.

Greenland

contains enough fresh water as ice to raise sea level worldwide by. Greenland may become warm enough by 2100 to begin an almost complete melt over more than 1,000 years. James E. Hansen suggests that inadequate attention is being given to this issue.
One study suggests it would take 3,000 years to completely melt the Greenland ice sheet. This figure was derived from the assumed levels of greenhouse gases over the duration of the experiment.
As the Greenland ice sheet loses mass from calving of icebergs as well as by melting of ice, any such processes tend to accelerate the loss of the ice sheet.

Millennial-timescale events

Some long-term effects happen over thousands, not hundreds, of years.

Disruption to thermohaline circulation

Early work with simplified models suggested that global warming could cause a shutdown of the thermohaline circulation. This effect is not replicated in more sophisticated coupled ocean-atmosphere global climate models, which do not shutdown but do display varying degrees of slowdown.
This may take a considerable time to occur, as Knutti and Stocker found, again from a simplified model, when :"…thermohaline shutdowns can occur thousands of years after the warming has stopped."

Ocean anoxia

One study suggests that the amount of oxygen dissolved in the oceans may decline, with adverse consequences for ocean life. This effect was determined using a model run of 100,000 years. The researchers predicted:

…severe, long-term ocean oxygen depletion, as well as a great expansion of ocean oxygen-minimum zones for scenarios with high emissions or high climate sensitivity. We find that climate feedbacks within the Earth system amplify the strength and duration of global warming, ocean heating and oxygen depletion. Decreased oxygen solubility from surface-layer warming accounts for most of the enhanced oxygen depletion in the upper 500 m of the ocean. Possible weakening of ocean overturning and convection lead to further oxygen depletion, also in the deep ocean.

Other research by the Leibniz Institute for Marine Sciences predicts that minimum oxygen zones, particularly in the Pacific, are expanding, with an estimated total reduction of ocean oxygen levels from 1% to 7% by the end of the century.

Clathrate decomposition

, also called methane hydrate, is a form of water ice that contains a large amount of methane within its crystal structure. Extremely large deposits of methane clathrate have been found under sediments on the ocean floors of Earth.
MacDonald suggests clathrate volumes are "about 11,000 Gt of carbon for ocean sediments, and about 400 Gt for sediments under permafrost regions". Buffett and Archer predict "eventual releases of 2000–4000 Gt C in response to a ~2000 Gt C anthropogenic carbon release", for which they suggest no timescale.
Archer considered the timescale and determined that "…on longer time scales of 1–10 , there may be a positive feedback with ocean temperature, amplifying the long-term climate impact of anthropogenic release."

Carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere

Stabilizing the global average temperature would require large reductions in CO2 emissions, as well as reductions in emissions of other greenhouse gases such as methane and nitrous oxide. Emissions of CO2 would need to be reduced by more than 80% relative to their peak level. Even if this were achieved, global average temperatures would remain close to their highest level for many centuries, prolonging the current interglacial period by at least 100,000 years. As of 2016, emissions of CO2 from burning fossil fuels had stopped increasing, but The Guardian reports they need to be "reduced to have a real impact on climate change". Meanwhile, this greenhouse gas continues to accumulate in the atmosphere. In that context, the New York Times reported that scientific installations analyzing oceanic air detected the excess carbon dioxide in the atmosphere "rose at the highest rate on record in 2015 and 2016." It has been suggested that this rise in CO2 levels is the result of changing absorption patterns of the ocean and land surface in that they may have reached the limit of their ability to absorb carbon dioxide.

Long-term return to equilibrium

After the PETM peak there was an extended period of cooling or "climate whiplash".
While the warm surface waters of the oceans have limited ability to absorb anthropogenic carbon dioxide, the coldest surface waters near the poles can transfer significant amounts of carbon dioxide to deep-ocean reserves. Over a period of many centuries, this process and the process of calcium carbonate absorption of carbon dioxide on land and in the oceans will remove 60–80% of the excess carbon dioxide.
Igneous rock when exposed to a near surface environment absorbs carbon dioxide through a very slow weathering rate, but weathering increases in a warmer, higher rainfall climate, speeding the process. This geological weathering will absorb the remaining 20–40% of anthropogenic carbon dioxide over the period of tens of thousands to hundreds of thousands of years.
Another way to bring these long term effects back to equilibrium is to understand to nature of coupled natural and human systems. If more research is done on the feedbacks of these systems, there can be better approaches on how to mitigate the negative effects that are derived from these systems. Environmental factor#Socioeconomic Drivers