"Destabilizing Earth System Components"
Scientists Meet Scientists – Wednesday Coffee Talk
- Date: Dec 17, 2025
- Time: 01:00 PM - 02:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
- Speaker: Niklas Boers (Earth System Modelling, TUM)
- https://www.asg.ed.tum.de/esm/staff-members/boers-niklas-prof-dr-rer-nat/
- Location: Institute for Advanced Study (TUM-IAS), Technische Universität München, Lichtenbergstr. 2a, 85748 Garching
- Room: Online (Zoom)
- Host: TUM Institute for Advanced Study (TUM-IAS)
- Contact: events@ias.tum.de
Abstract:
There is rising concern that several parts of the Earth system may abruptly transition to alternative stable states in response to anthropogenic climate and land-use change. Key candidates of such tipping elements include the Greenland Ice Sheet, the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation, the South American monsoon system and the Amazon rainforest. The levels of anthropogenic forcing at which transitions to alternative states can be expected remain uncertain. In this talk I present observation-based evidence that the stability of these four tipping elements has declined in recent decades, suggesting that they have moved towards their critical thresholds, which may be crossed within the range of unmitigated anthropogenic warming. Our results call for better monitoring of these tipping elements and for increased efforts to stop greenhouse gas emissions and land-use change.