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The Antarctic Peninsula under present day climate and future low, medium-high and very high emissions scenarios

Lookup NU author(s): Professor Bethan DaviesORCiD

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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0).


Abstract

The Antarctic Peninsula is warming rapidly, with more frequent extreme temperature and precipitation events, reduced sea ice, glacier retreat, ice shelf collapse, and ecological shifts. Here, we review its behaviour under present-day climate, and low (SSP 1–2.6), medium-high (SSP 3–7.0) and very high (SSP 5–8.5) future emissions scenarios, corresponding to global temperature increases of 1.8 °C, 3.6 °C and 4.4 °C by 2100. Higher emissions will bring more days above 0 °C, increased liquid precipitation, ocean warming, and more intense extreme weather events such as ocean heat waves and atmospheric rivers. Surface melt on ice shelves will increase, depleting firn air content and promoting meltwater ponding. Under the highest emission scenario, collapse of the Larsen C and Wilkins ice shelves is likely by 2100 CE, and loss of sea ice and ice shelves around the Peninsula will exacerbate the current trends of land-ice mass loss. Collapse of George VI Ice Shelf by 2300 under SSP 5–8.5 would substantially increase sea level contributions. Under this very high emissions scenario, sea level contributions from the Peninsula could reach 7.5 ± 14.1 mm by 2100 CE and 116.3 ± 66.9 mm by 2300 CE. Conversely, under the lower emissions scenarios, the Antarctic Peninsula’s sea ice remains similar to present, and land ice is predicted to undergo only minor grounding line recession and thinning. Changes in sea surface temperatures and the change from snow to rain will impact marine and terrestrial biota, altering species richness and enhancing colonisation by non-native species. Ranges of key species such as krill and salps are likely to contract to the south, impacting their marine vertebrate predators. These changing conditions will also influence Antarctic Peninsula research, fisheries, tourism, infrastructure and logistics. The future of the Peninsula depends on the choices made today. Limiting temperatures to below 2 °C, and as close as possible to 1.5 °C (by following the SSP 1–1.9 or 1–2.6 scenarios), combined with effective governance, will result in increased resilience and relatively modest changes. Any higher emissions scenarios will damage pristine systems, cause sustained, irreversible ice loss on human timescales, and spread to Antarctic regions beyond the Peninsula.


Publication metadata

Author(s): Davies BJ, Atkinson A, Banwell AF, Brandon M, Caton Harrison T, Convey P, De Rydt J, Dodds K, Downie R, Edwards TL, Gilbert E, Hubbard B, Hughes KA, Marshall GJ, Orr A, Rogelj J, Seroussi H, Siegert M, Stroeve J, Rumble J

Publication type: Article

Publication status: Published

Journal: Frontiers in Environmental Science

Year: 2026

Volume: 13

Online publication date: 20/02/2026

Acceptance date: 11/12/2025

Date deposited: 27/02/2026

ISSN (electronic): 2296-665X

Publisher: Frontiers Research Foundation

URL: https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/environmental-science/articles/10.3389/fenvs.2025.1730203/full

DOI: 10.3389/fenvs.2025.1730203

Data Access Statement: The Supplementary Material for this article can be found online at: https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fenvs.2025.1730203/full#supplementary-material


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Funding

Funder referenceFunder name
AA is supported by the Antarctic Wildlife Fund.
AFB received support from the US National Science Foundation under awards 1841607 and 2213702 to the University of Colorado Boulder (PI Banwell).
AO, EG and GM acknowledge funding from the PolarRES project, funded as part of the EU Horizon 2020 H2020-LC-CLA-2018–2019-2020 call under grant agreement number 101003590.
FCDO Polar Regions Department.
HS is supported by a grant from NASA Cryospheric Science Program (#80NSSC22K0383).
grant NSF PHY-2309135 to the Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics (KITP)
JDR is supported by a UKRI Future Leaders Fellowship (grant no. MR/W011816/1).
PC and KH are supported by NERC core funding to the BAS “Biodiversity, Evolution and Adaptation Team” and Environment Office, respectively.

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