The West Antarctic Peninsula is one of the most rapidly warming places on Earth. We have launched an expedition there to document many of the impacts of climate change. One of the most visible is the impact on sea ice. In large part because of rapidly rising temperatures, sea ice is now melting earlier in the spring and forming later in the fall. Altogether, the ice season is months shorter now than it was in the late 1970s. That’s a direct threat to plants and animals that rely on sea ice to survive.

Watch our blog for the latest updates from our expedition, when we report back on the impacts of climate change on sea and land.

A MESSAGE FROM AL GORE

Living on Thin Ice

01/25/2012 // 9:05 am // 27 Comments //

Last September, millions of you joined us for 24 Hours of Reality, when we connected the dots between the extreme weather events happening all over the world and the reality of the climate crisis. Together, we saw that we don’t need to travel far to see the impacts of climate change. Most of us are already feeling those impacts close to home.

Yet the climate crisis is also causing momentous changes in remote regions far from major population centers, in places like Antarctica, Greenland and the North Polar Ice Cap. Some of the most dangerous changes in our climate system are the ones that often receive the least attention.

Consider that Antarctica, the massive continent at the southern tip of our planet, holds 90% of the Earth’s ice. It is a frozen desert, covered in ice that at some points is two miles thick. What happens to the rest of the world as that frozen water is released, at ever increasing rates, as a result of the rising temperatures caused by climate change?

Even though Antarctica is thousands of miles distant from the rest of the world, the melting ice on this continent should be of paramount concern to all of us. As our planet’s ice melts, sea levels are rising steadily. This increases the risk of storm surges, coastal floods, diminished supplies of drinking water for billions of people, and hundreds of millions of climate refugees.

I first traveled to Antarctica in 1988. At the time, it was already clear that our southernmost continent stood at the frontier of the global climate crisis. Scientists expected that as climate change accelerated, Antarctica would be one of the fastest warming areas of the planet. This prediction has proven true: Today, the West Antarctic Peninsula is warming about four times faster than the global average. In many ways, it is the biggest “canary in the coal mine,” signaling one of the largest impacts of climate change for the entire world.

To better understand the changes taking place near the South Pole and the impacts those changes will have around the world, I will be returning to Antarctica this month with The Climate Reality Project. A large number of civic and business leaders, activists and concerned citizens from many countries on this voyage will be joined by many of the world’s leading climate scientists and Antarctica experts to see firsthand and in real time how the climate crisis is unfolding in Antarctica.

In parallel with this expedition, we are encouraging our partners and supporters to organize their own expeditions closer to home. Over the next few weeks, The Climate Reality Project will document how the melting of the world’s ice is impacting us everywhere from Brooklyn to Bangladesh and from Ecuador to the Arctic. To follow these expeditions, I encourage you to keep checking our website, Living on Thin Ice.

Since my first trip to Antarctica more than 22 years ago, much has changed. The rate of ice melting has increased. However, there are many positive changes as well: The solutions to this crisis — clean energy technologies like wind and solar, and solutions for improving the efficiency of businesses and industry — have become exponentially cheaper and more widely available than ever before. The science has become even more robust, and the impacts have become far more immediate and severe. What hasn’t changed, however, is that many of our political leaders around the world still lack the courage to solve the defining crisis of our age. Most significantly, a global movement to build and sustain the political will necessary is growing stronger every day.

I hope you will join me and The Climate Reality Project as we explore how changes on a remote continent are part of our shared climate reality. And I hope you’ll take the time to explore the impacts climate change is having on your own community, whether through one of our expeditions or through one of your own. I’ll be updating this blog soon with observations from Antarctica, and I invite you to check back on this page for more.

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27 Comments

  • Gail Romansky

    January 25th

    We are all “Living on Thin Ice” and those who don’t believe are in total denial!

  • Bradley J. Dibble

    January 26th

    Too often, people couldn’t care less about what’s happening elsewhere in the world due to global warming. Limited perspicacity leads to a lack of understanding. I sincerely hope that this particular goal of the Climate Project Reality will enable people to see the bigger picture—that what happens in one part of the globe affects every other part. Only then can we truly hope to achieve the enlightenment needed so that people will want to make a difference.

  • Bill Stevens

    January 26th

    How about a drawing or competition for a spot on the Antarctic boat!

  • Jeanne Kempers

    January 26th

    Global Warming is The Environmental
    Crisis of today and should be a number 1 priority.. We’re running out of time to
    reserve this condition!!!

  • Elizabeth Pagano

    January 26th

    Everything in life as we know it and have yet to discover is connected infinitely and seamlessly. So when are we going to REALLY going to look at and take responsibility for the BIG picture????

  • Joe Dixon

    January 26th

    Al, I really wish you had become the president in 2000. I can only imagine how different the orld would be. However, the information you provide on global warming is also important and concerning to all informed. It appears that adaptation has been chosen over resolution. Similar to your movie, “an inconvenient truth”, would you please consider creating another updated communication? We need to know. Thank you and may God Bless you.

  • J Robert

    January 26th

    In Massachusetts when I was young (1960′s) the ice on the lakes always froze and we went skating and ice fishing all the time. Today we are lucky if a small pond freezes or if we get ice for a few weeks during the coldest 2 months of the year. This winter we have seen no lakes freezing at all. It’s been above average temperatures. We have had very little snow. Last year we had a lot of snow. The swinging in our climate is getting more pronounced. In 2011, we had a Hurricane, Tornados, earthquake, and a freak snowstorm in October of a foot of snow when leaves were still on the trees causing massive tree damage. It melted within a week. It was the most snow central Mass has had this year.

  • R.Curtis

    January 26th

    You get America to change, but that does nothing if the rest of the entire world doesn’t follow suit. Who has the power to really change the evolution of the cycling changes of the planet? Men? I think not..

  • Susan Bliss

    January 26th

    This winter on Long Island has been the mildest ever. It has been springlike for most of the season. My springtime bulbs started to bloom as far back as two weeks ago or more. They are half in the ground and half out of the ground. Nature doesn’t lie, it is telling us and showing us the changes that are taking place.

  • Pamela Bell

    January 26th

    I moved to Maine in 1972 when the snow pack generally reached three to four feet and didn’t melt at all until what we called the January thaw; a few days when melting snow dripped off roofs to make little holes in the snow below. Final melt didn’t occur until mid-April. This year, right now, the ground is bare and we’ve had only 4 or 5 inches of snow twice so far.

  • Karen Borst-Rothe

    January 26th

    Reread Jared Diamond’s book, Collapse, especially the 2nd chapter on Easter Island. That has become a well-documented natural history example of what happens when a society’s leaders do not look at overuse of resources — Easter Island society collapsed with dire consequences. By the time they noticed the relationship between resource depletion and living, it was too late. We should be smarter, and can be, if people just will look to the larger issues of climate change and ignore the willfully ignorant politicians.

  • Lynn DeLisi

    January 26th

    Hi Al,
    Good luck on this fantastic expedition to Antartica. I look forward to hearing about its outcome. Remember those penguins!

  • ingrid dabney

    January 27th

    i wish i could be on tis exhibition but will satisfy myself in see in videos and report of same. glad you are doing such a great job. voted for you and wish you would have gotten the presidency. hw different we may be now as a country.

  • John Ryan

    January 27th

    what i am beginning to see is that that the people who believe in climate change are looking to the future and those who do not are mired in the status quo and cannot see beyond today. trying to alter the perception that everything is OK and that nothing is going to change is a really big job. i suppose that when manhattan is submerged there will be some converts.

  • Aldea Choquette

    January 27th

    It’s scary to see our seasons taking such drastic changes…..Massachusetts winter weather almost feeling like southern states. Summers being dry with incredible heat………little snow hurting ski and snowmobile industries…….
    This is not about one country, but a world wide problem. Yet, it begins with each one of us. Yes, industries throughout the world need to address their major industries, but we, as individuals need to ask ourselves, what can I do to help global warming? Is it a simple thing such as unpluging phone chargers when not in use, is it using more efficient light bulbs, is it………we can each fill in our own blanks of what we can do! It must start with each of us! Small things can amount to an industry!

  • Dennis Griffin

    January 27th

    We have been fighting wars over oil for a long time now.

    When are we going to wake up and realize that we need to wage a full scale “War on Climate Change”. And all countries could be on the same side in this war.
    The bloodshed will not be from going to war but rather from continued inaction.

    Currently the United States is the dominant country in the world and as such we need to lead this revolution. And the first battle in this war needs to be against our bought-out government who is indebted to so many special interests that they can no longer represent the citizens of our country.

    Our government needs new direction with new focus. And we can’t wait for the current system to change, because it has proved that it is incapable of significant change. We need a viable third party that is beholden only to our citizens and who’s #1 focus is on mitigating and adapting to climate change.

    The opinion mongers need to be muzzled and the scientists need to finally be listened to. (It wasn’t cable TV that got us to the moon in less than a decade)

  • Robert Bone

    January 27th

    I am afraid that this planet is very close to the point of no return. I hope and pray that we can show to the doubters the urgency of stemming the effects of pollution on our atmosphere. Thank Mr. Gore for your efforts on our behalf.

  • M V RAMANKRISHNA

    January 27th

    AL…I was a great fan of yours when you were vice president of USA years ago ….I prayed to the Lord that you would win the election and be president and help the world take a new turn in many ways…your rhetoric was inspiring, and your speeches left many speechless…!
    Perhaps with your unrelenting tenacity you are still fighting to deliver and make a difference …As a kid, I was fascinated when an airplane took off into the blue sky…but today I keep wondering how much damage these thousands of jets could possibly cause to the delicate ecosystem of the.world…In the name of progress many governments of the present era are showing the Nelson’s eye to the pollution aspect and silently contributing to the global warming unmindful of the drastic consequences …..Your anguish and concern for the melting ANTARCTICA should be an eye opener to rest of the world leaders….Sooner than later , everyone should fall in line and march behind you and save the planet of the catastrophes in the offing …..!
    May the Lord give you the strength and courage in your pursuit to save the planet of ours….! Raman

  • Jim Snowden

    January 28th

    If we all lived in a burning building, people would be waking each other up, calling the fire department and doing the best to deal with it… when it’s the planet, we have people in the lobby debating whether the building is on fire or not.

  • kathryn cheyne

    January 28th

    I also voted for you, Mr Gore. I also beleive this nation would not be in the crisis that it is Had you become President. I beleive this nation would have been farther along in our pursuit of alternitive sources of energy. God Bless you and keep up the awsome work that you are doing for all of us. THANK YOU

  • Marie Martin

    January 28th

    Mr. Gore, We sincerely appreciate your tenacity ! Like some others said.. THERE’S NO GLOBAL consciousness.. We pretend that this is not happening and that it will “the problem” for the next generation..! Pififul and shameful ! And the media contributes to this continuous ignorance for not emphasizing more on the situation which concerns to ALL of US .. not only to the lovely Penguins.. I’m originally from Argentina and even the glaziers at the south of Argentina started melting faster during the last 10 years !!! and Antartica is located many miles far from it.. Blessings !

  • Jan Moore

    January 29th

    So truly what is hoped to be accomplished by doing this? Travelling the world to show people what has already been put into motion expends more carbon does it not? At least that is what naysayers will say. No real addressing of this crisis from our own government. Carbon emissions continuing to climb. Agriculture globally continuing to be affected. Our oceans have acidified more in the last 200 years than the previous 21,000. A freshwater bulge in the Arctic growing larger with the threat of winds pushing it into the currents. So again, what is the purpose of all of this? What is the anticipated outcome? That any president of the US will stand up in front of the people to tell Congress to send him a bill that places a price on carbon in time? Obama won’t even do that. Matter of fact, he is in it thick with oil companies to give them investments in shale gas wells now all over the country besides allowing them to continue drilling. All we see are ads for natural gas and tarsands. Why isn’t money being expended to make ads countering them? Where are the billboards on highways where everyday people can see them? Why can’t money be expended to start agroecology projects in developing countries? Reforestation efforts? (moringa trees especially which are drought reisistant and provide food, medicine and water purification.) Solar stoves for people in the Himalayas? Solar energy projects? Preparing refugees who will need to be relocated due to sea level rise?

    A trip to Antarctica is exciting and may reveal some reality to the choir attending, but what about people out here like me and others? Would I need a million dollars for a ticket? I’m not putting down this idea because God knows people need to see reality, which is why I hope this is documented. However, who is all going on this journey? Richard Branson and his family- because he is rich. Any US Congressional members? You know, the true criminals in all of this who continue to reap benfits from their lies. When will they truly be held accountable? I’m all for anything that will turn the tide to real action as we head for that tipping point which has already begun. I just don’t understand why this has to be so exclusionary regarding those included in it. Lay people like myself who have been out here for years studying this on our own and reporting about it are getting weary of seeing nothing year after year but more deterioration of the planet we love, with too many people reaping benefits from it. We are running out of time. Do we really have another year to spend trying to convince people while we continue business as usual? I hope this makes a difference. As always , thank you for your vigilance and passion. I share it with you.

  • Radus Lungu

    January 29th

    Dear Al and all,
    I hope those comments are genuine, because I am so serious about the climate change, not just because we can see it every day (who CAN see it !) but I do believe that we MUST do something about it. Not just a handful of people but nations and humanity as a whole, because we are all living on this beautiful planet, regardless race, gender, religion, etc. I see no point in taxing people in Europe, UK, and other countries if the rest of the world do not care a bit, the damages are affecting all, not just a few. And remeber, if YOU can make a change, just do it, for yourself, for all of us. There’s more to be said but I leave it to you, Al, you can do better than me. Thank you for all you’re doing and I hope it’s not for money or other absconse reasons.

  • Ram Shrivastava

    January 29th

    Al:
    As the January 2012 ends in Rochester NY, we have no snow on my deck or front yard. Wish you safe travel to bring focus to this important issue.The information shared via your expedition will help plan to deal with climate change.

  • LOLIERO Véronique

    January 30th

    L’antarctique est l’un des endroits où les impacts des changement climatique est visible, des espèces vont disparaître quand d’autre espèces invasives vont apparaître. Le jour ou la faune disparaîtra il sera trop tard.
    Sans parler les conséquences liés à la fontes des glaces (inondations disparition des îles, etc…) Mais le gros problème peu de gens font des efforts pour améliorer la situation, vivent sans soucier de ce qui leur précédent tout le monde est concerné doit se mettre à contribution si demain on ne veut pas que les catastrophes naturelles deviennent de en plus en plus fréquents, et détruisent de nombreuses villes et laisse nombreuses familles sans foyer.

  • LOLIERO Véronique

    January 30th

    I think that people are going to become alarmant when impacts ecologies will become daily probleme. Many people those do not feel concerned and who are concerned who manifested for shown emergency and stakes there. Our big excess of consumption is very harmful.

  • Ian L. McQueen

    February 13th

    The world stopped warming around 1998. The Antarctic Peninsula is not representative of the continent itself; it extends to outside the Antarctic Circle. The temperature of Antarctica itself is always well below freezing. Climate changes; always has and probably always will. It may be warm(ish) in North America, but look at all the places where it is unusually cold: Europe, Japan, Australia, etc. Learn something about the North Atlantic Oscillation. Water is a greenhouse gas like CO2 and there is up to 100 times as much water in the air as CO2. In addition, the evaporation-convection-condensation of water moves much more energy to altitude than CO2. And on and on. A few Inconvenient Facts. A stunt trip to parts of Antarctica in summer proves nothing.

    Ian L. McQueen

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