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And as well as the oceans warm, another drawback from warming too is they won't be able to hold oxygen as well either. So oceans will be slowly becoming hypoxic. Permafrost. Permafrost is another problem. Finding permafrost leads to a release of huge amounts of CO2 and that compounds global temperature increases and therefore a feedback loop is now being created. There's a 2024 study and that came out in Penas. Penas has the proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences indicating that thawing of permafrost dictates the flow of water. The melting could produce formation and expansion of oxygen which then would release more CO2. The Arctic is experiencing a supercharging of climate change where temperatures are increasing four times faster than the rest of the world and this is called the Arctic amplification. Just dropping. This is repeater station kilo kilo seven. As more ice melts, the region absorbs more sunlight and this was written up in, there's a report written up in the International Science Council. An ice sheet loss in Greenland and with Antarctic has accelerated since the 1990s. More melting means higher sea levels and this impacts coastal communities. No one knows how much more warming the ice sheets can endure before passing a tipping point of no return. The Paris agreement wants to keep global warming below 1.5 degrees Celsius, 2.7 degrees Fahrenheit and well below 2 degrees Celsius, 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit. 1.5 degrees Celsius, 2.7 degrees Fahrenheit might be too high for the ice sheets to be able to maintain themselves.
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