By Daniel Brouse and Sidd Mukherjee
November 25, 2025
Introduction: The Shift From Gradual to Abrupt Sea Level Rise
Sea level rise (SLR) is one of the most revealing indicators of the accelerating pace of climate change. A century ago, global SLR was doubling roughly every 100 years. Ten years ago the doubling time had collapsed to a decade. By 2023, the doubling time had plunged to only two years.
This extraordinary acceleration led us to focus on a much more dangerous and poorly modeled phenomenon:
Sudden Sea Level Pulses (SSLPs) — rapid, stepwise jumps in sea level triggered by abrupt ice-sheet failures, subglacial “cork release” events, and ice-shelf structural collapse.
These pulses are not hypothetical. They are beginning to occur.
Examples include:
- Greenland Subglacial Flood: A massive outburst where trapped meltwater burst through the ice, demonstrating the potential for sudden hydrofracture.
- Alaska’s Mendenhall Glacier Outburst: A glacial flood that produced rapid, dangerous water-level increases downstream.
A detailed overview is archived at:
http://membrane.com/global_warming/Greenland-Ouburst.html
These events reveal something ice-sheet models have not yet fully integrated: meltwater can accumulate beneath ice until pressure surpasses structural integrity, causing the ice surface to fail catastrophically — a “cork release.” When this occurs at scale, sea levels can jump not millimeters per year, but multiple feet per year.
Why This Matters: The Risk of Abrupt, Multi-Foot Sea Level Jumps
The public still imagines sea level rise as a slow, linear process. But the Earth system does not behave linearly. When hydrofracture and ice-cliff collapse become common, we could face:
- Multi-foot sea level increases within a single decade
- 1–3 feet of rise within a single year in extreme pulse scenarios
- Little or no time for adaptation in cities like Miami, New York, Mumbai, Lagos, and Shanghai
Current global climate models fail to incorporate most “cork release” pathways because:
- Subglacial water transport is poorly mapped
- Meltwater storage and pressurization are not well parameterized
- Ice-shelf fracture mechanics are only partially resolved
- Positive feedback loops — such as meltwater-driven lubrication and ice-cliff collapse — are not modeled dynamically
The Greenland outburst events show that ice sheets can undergo abrupt, nonlinear failures — far faster than infrastructure, economies, or governance systems can adapt.
Sidd summarized it best:
“Under-ice hydrology is hard to observe… but once enough pressure builds, ice doesn’t melt — it fractures.”
Antarctica: The System Most Likely to Produce Catastrophic Pulses
While Greenland contributes meaningfully to long-term SLR, Antarctica is the critical risk for abrupt sea level pulses.
The East Antarctic Ice Sheet (EAIS)
- Holds ~170 feet of potential sea level rise
- Once thought stable for millennia
- Now showing early signs of warming-driven destabilization
- Marine-based sectors may begin collapsing this century
The West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS)
- Highly vulnerable
- Resting on retrograde (downward-sloping) bedrock
- Warm ocean water is eroding the shelves from below
- Pinning points are failing, which removes the natural “brakes”
Sidd’s assessment:
Greenland: “Effectively lost,” 100–300 years, +20 ft
West Antarctica: Likely collapse within decades to ~100 years, +10 ft
Total plausible rise by 2125: 20–30 feet, with the possibility of sudden pulses:
“We could dawdle along at half an inch a year, then see a few years at a foot per year.”
New Evidence: The Impending Failure of Thwaites Eastern Ice Shelf (TEIS)
In November 2025, Advancing Earth and Space Sciences published a landmark study:
“Evolution of Shear-Zone Fractures Presages the Disintegration of Thwaites Eastern Ice Shelf”
(https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1029/2025JF008352)
The TEIS is a keystone structure. Once it collapses, the glacier behind it — the “Doomsday Glacier” — will accelerate dramatically. The study found:
Key Findings
- Long-term shear fracturing (2002–2017):
Large fractures formed parallel to flow as the shelf strained against its pinning point. - Recent explosive tensile fracturing (2017–2022):
Smaller, orthogonal fractures began proliferating, indicating that structural integrity is failing. - Dynamic destabilization:
Satellite and GPS data reveal velocity perturbations rippling across the shelf as fractures expand — a sign of imminent collapse. - Transition of the pinning point from stabilizer to destabilizer:
Echoing Benn et al. (2022), the pinning point now increases fracture stress instead of reducing it. - Self-reinforcing feedback loop:
The shelf appears to be entering the “damage-acceleration-damage” feedback proposed by Lhermitte et al. (2020), a hallmark of impending disintegration.
What This Means
When TEIS collapses — an event many glaciologists now expect within years to a decade — Thwaites Glacier could:
- accelerate dramatically
- initiate ice-cliff collapse
- trigger multi-foot sea level pulses within short timescales
This is the largest currently unfolding structural failure in the cryosphere.
Cork-Release Events: A Distinct Class of Tipping Point
We define a “cork release” event as:
A sudden failure of ice or subglacial pressure systems causing rapid, high-volume discharge of water or ice into the ocean.
These events include:
- subglacial lake drainage
- rapid ice-shelf collapse
- meltwater-driven hydrofracture
- ice-cliff structural failure
Unlike gradual melt, cork-release events:
- are nonlinear
- occur suddenly
- accelerate with warming
- have global consequences within months to years
- are triggered by thresholds that are difficult to predict
This makes them one of the most dangerous — and least modeled — climate feedbacks.
Conclusion: The Urgent Need to Model Abrupt Sea Level Change
The climate system is not simply warming. It is accelerating, destabilizing, and producing events far outside historical norms. Sea level rise will not be a smooth curve; it will be stepwise, punctuated by abrupt pulses.
To prepare for what is coming, climate science and adaptation planning must incorporate:
- ice-shelf fracture dynamics
- under-ice hydrology
- subglacial pressurization
- ice-cliff collapse physics
- nonlinear feedbacks
- sudden sea level pulse scenarios
Human systems are built for gradual change. The cryosphere is not.
The question is no longer if abrupt sea level pulses will occur — but how soon, how large, and how many.
* Our probabilistic, ensemble-based climate model — which incorporates complex socio-economic and ecological feedback loops within a dynamic, nonlinear system — projects that global temperatures are becoming unsustainable this century. This far exceeds earlier estimates of a 4°C rise over the next thousand years, highlighting a dramatic acceleration in global warming. We are now entering a phase of compound, cascading collapse, where climate, ecological, and societal systems destabilize through interlinked, self-reinforcing feedback loops.
What Can I Do?
The single most important action you can take to help address the climate crisis is simple: stop burning fossil fuels. There are numerous actions you can take to contribute to saving the planet. Each person bears the responsibility to minimize pollution, discontinue the use of fossil fuels, reduce consumption, and foster a culture of love and care. The Butterfly Effect illustrates that a small change in one area can lead to significant alterations in conditions anywhere on the globe. Hence, the frequently heard statement that a fluttering butterfly in China can cause a hurricane in the Atlantic. Be a butterfly and affect the world.
→ “Solutions to the Fossil Fuel Economy and the Myths Accelerating Climate and Economic Collapse.“