Key Indicators

Global Indicators that Influence Sea Level Rise

Important signals of the overall direction of sea level rise.

Antarctic Ice Sheet

Data from NASA's GRACE and GRACE Follow-On satellites show that the land ice sheet in Antarctica has been losing mass since 2002.

The GRACE mission ended in June 2017. The GRACE Follow-On mission began collecting data in June 2018 and is continuing to monitor both ice sheets. This record includes new data-processing methods and is continually updated as more numbers come in, with a delay of up to two months.

This is important because the ice sheets of Greenland and Antarctica store about two-thirds of all the fresh water on Earth. They are losing ice due to the ongoing warming of Earth’s surface and ocean. Meltwater coming from these ice sheets is responsible for about one-third of the global average rise in sea level since 1993.

Note: You now need to create an Earthdata account to access NASA's ice sheet data. Register here for free. Once logged in, click "HTTP" under the charts on this page to access the data.

Missions That Observe Land Ice

Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment Follow-On (GRACE-FO)

NASA's IceBridge

IceSat-2

ANTARCTICA MASS VARIATION SINCE 2002

Data source: Ice mass measurement by NASA's GRACE satellites. Gap represents time between missions.
Credit: NASA
Rate of Change
137
billion metric tons per year since 2002