The Antarctic Peninsula is warming at one of the fastest rates on Earth — average temperatures have risen by about 3 °C over the past 60 years, three times faster than the global average.
A new comprehensive review by British and international climate scientists, published in Frontiers in Environmental Science, models future climate trajectories for the region under low, medium, and very high greenhouse gas emission scenarios up to 2100.
The study uses the latest CMIP6 global models combined with high-resolution regional simulations to assess temperature changes, sea ice loss, surface melt, and the stability of major ice shelves such as Larsen C, Wilkins, and George VI.
The peninsula sits in a highly sensitive transition zone influenced by the Antarctic Circumpolar Current, shifting westerly winds, and increasing atmospheric rivers. Recent decades have already brought:
The authors stress that the next 10–15 years will largely determine the long-term fate of the peninsula’s ice shelves and ecosystems. Even under the most optimistic low-emission pathway (SSP1-2.6, global warming limited to ~1.8 °C):
Under medium (SSP2-4.5) and high (SSP5-8.5) scenarios, these changes will be 2–3 times more severe.
Low-emissions scenario (SSP1-2.6):
Very high-emissions scenario (SSP5-8.5):
Rapid ice shelf loss would:
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Even if global net-zero emissions are achieved after 2050, the heat already in the system will continue driving ice loss for centuries.
The scientists emphasize that aggressive emission reductions before 2035 offer the best chance to preserve key ice shelves and limit the peninsula’s contribution to sea-level rise.
Climate change is already transforming the Antarctic Peninsula into a fundamentally different environment. Without deep and immediate cuts in greenhouse gas emissions, accelerated glacier melt, ice shelf collapse (especially Larsen C and Wilkins), and rising sea levels will become inevitable. The coming decade represents humanity’s last realistic opportunity to avoid the worst outcomes for this critical polar region and the planet as a whole.
Sources: Frontiers in Environmental Science (2025, DOI: 10.3389/fenvs.2025.1730203), British Antarctic Survey, Nature Climate Change, IPCC AR6.
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