The world's goal to limit global warming to no more than 2C may not be enough to stop the collapse of polar ice sheets, scientists say.
An international scientific review co-authored by Victoria University researcher Associate Professor Nick Golledge found ice sheets in Antarctica and Greenland had tipping points at which melting would rapidly ramp up, and ice sheet retreat could become unstoppable.
Golledge's colleague, Associate Professor Rob McKay, said the reason for this differed between hemispheres, with melting of Greenland controlled by atmospheric warming and Antarctica by oceanic warming.
But the threshold to reach these tipping points in both regions was between 1.5 to 2C, which suggested that even if the obligations of the Paris Agreement were met, the world would come "extremely close" to the point of no return for accelerated retreat, McKay said.
"While this melting will play out over hundreds to thousands of years, it is apparent from this work that the more we overshoot the 1.5C target, the more rapid this accelerated ice sheet melt will be."