Greetings, caring viewers, 
to today’s episode 
of Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home, 
the first of a two-part 
series, focusing on 
the deep interconnection 
between our oceans 
and the world’s climate. 
The experts featured today 
are Dr. Steve Rintoul, 
an oceanographer 
from Australia’s national 
scientific research body, 
the Commonwealth 
Scientific and Industrial 
Research Organisation 
and Professor 
Anders Levermann, 
a senior researcher at 
the Potsdam Institute of 
Climate Impact Research 
in Germany and 
the lead author of 
the Sea Level Change 
chapter for the coming 
5th Assessment Report 
of the United Nations 
Intergovernmental Panel 
on Climate Change.
Oceans cover 71% of 
the Earth’s surface, 
contain approximately 
97 % of the world’s water,  
sustain a diverse array 
of sea life and play 
a vital role in regulating 
our planet’s climate 
in a multitude of ways – 
including through 
thermohaline circulation, 
also known as the 
Great Ocean Conveyor.
If you think about 
the globe and what this 
overturning circulation 
really looks like, it’s 
probably easiest to start 
in the northern part of 
the Atlantic (Ocean) 
up near Greenland 
and Iceland. 
Water sinks 
at the surface there and 
flows southward through 
the whole Atlantic basin, 
until it reaches 
the Southern Ocean. 
And then 
very strong currents 
in the Southern Ocean 
redistribute that water, 
(and) carry it around 
the globe, spinning 
around Antarctica. 
That water then passes 
through the Indian 
and Pacific Oceans, 
ultimately returns to 
the Southern Ocean and 
gradually warms and 
becomes lighter again. 
And then (it) flows back 
in, northward through 
the Atlantic Basin in the 
upper part of the ocean, 
and that closes the loop. 
The oceans help stabilize 
Earth’s temperature 
by absorbing heat, 
with approximately 
a thousand times greater 
heat absorption capacity 
than that 
of the atmosphere.  
The thermohaline 
circulation transports 
a lot of heat from 
low latitudes 
in the Atlantic (Ocean), 
near the equator, 
to high latitudes 
near the North Pole 
in the Atlantic (Ocean). 
The entire climate system 
is in tune with 
this thermohaline 
circulation operating.
The oceans influence 
climate mostly because 
they can store and 
transport vast amounts of 
heat and carbon dioxide. 
So, the upper few meters 
of the ocean, for example, 
can store more heat than 
the entire atmosphere. 
So when we talk about 
global warming over 
the last 50 years, 
what we’re really 
talking about is 
heating up of the ocean. 
Because about 80 or 90% 
of the extra heat 
that’s been stored by 
the Earth’s system 
over the last 50 years 
has gone into the oceans. 
And so the oceans 
influence climate and 
it also means that 
observations of the oceans 
are an important way 
for us to track 
climate change because 
that’s where the heat
is accumulating.
Scientists estimate that 
the oceans currently 
absorb a third to 40% 
of the CO2 emitted 
from human activity.  
However recent research 
by Dr. Jeffrey Park of 
Yale University, USA’s 
Institute for Biospheric 
Studies concludes that 
in recent decades 
there has been 
a reduction in capacity 
because the oceans 
are warming.
If the oceans did not 
serve as a carbon sink, 
atmospheric CO2 levels 
would be much higher 
than the current 
392 parts per million, 
perhaps reaching 
a highly dangerous 
500-600 parts per million.
The other important 
aspect is that 
the ocean stores lots of 
carbon dioxide that 
we’re emitting into 
Earth’s atmosphere 
by burning fossil fuels 
and by clearing land. 
About a third of that is 
ending up in the ocean. 
If the ocean removes 
that carbon dioxide, 
that tends to slow down 
the rate of climate change.
They’re helping to 
slow down or moderate 
the rate of climate change
that would 
otherwise occur if all the 
carbon dioxide remained 
in the atmosphere. 
What would happen if 
thermohaline circulation 
substantially slowed 
or even shut down 
due to the effects 
of climate change? 
Professor Levermann 
believes such an event 
would produce huge 
instability in the planet’s 
climate system, such as 
global sea levels rising 
10 to 20 times faster 
than the current rate.
If you put additional 
fresh water into the 
North Atlantic (Ocean) 
by melting Greenland 
or by having more 
discharge from rivers, 
from Siberian rivers, 
which flows into 
the Arctic, and then 
eventually into the North 
Atlantic (Ocean) or, 
change in precipitation 
patterns in the Atlantic 
(Ocean) can freshen the 
North Atlantic (Ocean) 
so strongly that 
there won’t be 
any sinking of water 
anymore, 
that would disrupt this 
thermohaline circulation, 
and could make it stop.
If you shut it down 
in climate models, 
the temperature in the 
North Atlantic (Ocean) 
decreases by up to 
eight degrees (Celsius). 
That’s on top of 
global warming. 
It’s not a contradiction to 
global warming, because 
it’s just a re-organization 
of heat. 
So the Southern Oceans 
get warmer, the entire 
Southern Hemisphere 
gets warmer, while 
the North Atlantic 
(Ocean) gets colder. 
The problem is that this 
would already influence 
agriculture in Europe 
quite significantly, 
but of course, 
also the ecosystems and 
the Arctic sea ice cover. 
But it’s because there’s 
so much heat associated 
with this thermohaline 
circulation, 
it’s going to disturb 
the entire climate system.
And that means 
two things: First, 
global warming would 
increase or 
would accelerate slightly 
in this period. 
And there would be 
less CO2 uptake, which 
would further increase 
global warming too. 
Then the rain belt 
in the tropics would shift. 
At the moment, 
the rain belt, which 
follows the equator 
quite nicely, is slightly 
dislocated over the 
Atlantic Basin because of 
this heat transport to 
the north, because 
this rain belt doesn’t 
really want to follow 
the equator, 
it wants to follow 
the thermal equator, 
the warmest place. 
When we return, we’ll 
continue examining our 
oceans and their effect 
on global climate. 
Please stay tuned to 
Supreme Master 
Television.
Welcome back to today’s 
Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home 
on Supreme Master 
Television where 
we are focusing on 
how the oceans affect 
the world’s climate. 
Recently scientists have 
discovered a fast-moving, 
deep ocean current 
around Antarctica 
that transports 
massive volumes of 
water annually and is 
a major component of the 
Great Ocean Conveyor. 
An important part of this 
overturning circulation 
are these very strong, 
deep currents that 
we find mostly 
on the western sides of 
the ocean basins. 
They’re pretty well 
studied in the Atlantic 
(Ocean), but we know 
very little about them 
in the Southern Ocean. 
So, there’s a huge plateau, 
a submarine mountain 
range, which is 
more than 
2,000 kilometers long, 
that sits in the 
Indian Ocean sector of 
the Southern Ocean. 
On the flanks of that 
we had some reasons to 
expect there might be a 
current there, but no one 
had ever measured it. 
So we really didn’t know 
just how strong 
the current was 
and whether it was 
an important part of the 
overturning circulation 
or not. 
A few years ago, 
in a joint experiment with 
Japanese scientists and 
Australian scientists, 
we deployed some 
instruments along 
the flanks of this plateau 
to measure the deep 
ocean currents there. 
What we found 
were some surprises. 
The first surprise was 
that the ocean currents 
were quite strong; 
the average speed 
over two years was 
about 20 centimeters 
per second at a depth 
of 4,000 meters. 
Twenty centimeters 
per second doesn’t 
sound very fast, 
but for the deep ocean 
it’s very unusual. 
In fact they’re the 
strongest, the quickest 
deep currents that we’ve 
measured in the ocean 
at those depths.
It sits about 4,000 meters 
below the sea surface and 
runs along the sea floor. 
But it extends for 
thousands of meters up 
through the water column. 
So, it occupies a lot of 
the depth of the ocean, 
but it’s quite narrow. 
It’s only about 
50 kilometers across. 
So we’ve used 
those current speed 
measurements, 
and measurements of 
temperature and salinity 
of the water to calculate 
how much water 
is moving northward, 
away from Antarctica, in 
this deep current system. 
We found that it’s about 
10 million cubic meters 
of water per second. 
That’s 
a pretty tough number 
to get your head around. 
If we add up the flow 
of all the world’s rivers 
combined we get about 
one-million cubic meters 
per second. 
This deep river of 
cold water flowing away 
from Antarctica is about 
10 times the size of 
all the world’s rivers 
combined. 
So what that tells us is 
that this is indeed an 
important branch of this 
overturning circulation 
and it’s one aspect of 
the ocean currents that 
we need to understand 
and be able to simulate 
if we’re going to project 
how climate might 
change in the future. 
Little research has been 
done on the oceans of 
the Southern Hemisphere 
compared to those of 
the Northern Hemisphere. 
However, over the years, 
measurements of 
Southern Ocean currents 
have been improved 
through the use 
of innovative 
satellite systems.
So what’s changed 
in the last few years is, 
first of all, much better 
satellite instruments. 
We have satellites that 
can now measure the 
height of the sea surface 
to within 
a millimeter or two. 
So we’re able to study 
ocean currents from 
space now in a way that 
we couldn’t do before. 
It works a little bit like
a speed gun that police 
might use on the highway 
to determine how fast 
your car is moving. 
It sends down a radar 
pulse from the satellite, 
it bounces off the surface 
of the ocean and 
returns to the satellite. 
“Argo,” 
a robotic instrument 
that collects regular 
information on the status 
of ocean currents, 
is a collaborative 
international project 
in which 23 countries 
contribute floats 
and many others help 
in implementation. 
It’s an instrument 
that drifts with 
the ocean currents at 
a depth of one- or 
two-thousand meters 
below the sea surface. 
It’s carried 
by the ocean currents, 
and every 10 days it 
inflates a small balloon 
that’s part of the instrument.
That changes 
the buoyancy. 
It makes the float 
a little bit lighter 
in the water column. 
It rises through the ocean 
from 2,000 meters 
up to the surface. 
And it measures 
temperature, salinity and 
sometimes oxygen levels 
as it goes. 
When it reaches 
the surface, it can 
transmit that data to us 
by satellite and then 
sinks back down again 
and drifts 
for another 10 days. 
We now have more than 
3,000 of these instruments 
deployed throughout 
the world’s oceans. 
We sincerely thank you 
Dr. Steven Rintoul 
and Professor 
Anders Levermann 
for taking time from 
your busy schedules 
to speak with us 
about the oceans and 
their relation to our 
planet’s climate system. 
From your significant 
research, it is apparent 
that the functioning 
of the Great Ocean 
Conveyor is 
highly important in 
controlling how much 
carbon and heat 
our oceans can absorb 
and thus plays 
a very significant role in 
determining the extent 
of future climate change.
For more details 
on the scientists featured 
on today’s program, 
please visit 
the following websites:
Professor 
Anders Levermann 
www.PIK-Potsdam.de
Dr. Steven Rintoul  
www.CSIRO.au
Eco-conscious viewers, 
thank you for joining us 
on today’s program.  
Please join us again 
next Wednesday 
on Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home 
for the final part of 
this two-part series. 
Coming up next is 
Enlightening Entertainment,
after Noteworthy News. 
May the guidance 
of the Providence 
always be with us.
Greetings, informed viewers, 
to today’s episode 
of Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home, 
the conclusion of a two-part 
series, focusing on 
the deep interconnection 
between our oceans 
and the world’s climate. 
Oceans cover 71% of 
the Earth’s surface, 
contain approximately 
97 % of the world’s water,  
sustain a diverse array 
of sea life and play 
a vital role in regulating 
our planet’s climate 
in a multitude of ways – 
including through 
thermohaline circulation, 
also known as the 
Great Ocean Conveyor
which absorbs 
large quantities of heat 
and carbon dioxide.
Last week in part one,
we saw the different ways
in which the oceans
stabilize the climate,
but the relationship
is not one way.  
Today we’ll examine
how climate change
increases sea levels
and some of
the possible consequences
that our world faces
from this process.
The experts featured today 
Dr. Claude
Hillaire-Marcel,
a Canadian geoscientist
from the University
of Quebec at Montreal,
Professor 
Anders Levermann, 
a senior researcher at 
the Potsdam Institute of 
Climate Impact Research 
in Germany and 
the lead author of 
the Sea Level Change 
chapter for the coming 
5th Assessment Report 
of the United Nations 
Intergovernmental Panel 
on Climate Change (IPCC)
and Dr. Ted Scambos,
senior research scientist
at The National Snow and
Ice Data Center (NSIDC)
at the University
of Colorado, USA.
The major drivers 
of advancing sea levels 
are the thermal expansion 
of seawater and the melting 
of ice caps and glaciers 
due to global warming. 
We’re disturbing 
the climate system with 
a temperature increase, 
and the higher 
the temperature increases, 
the more disturbance 
we introduce and therefore 
the risk increases, 
I would say. 
Sea level can rise by 
the expansion of water 
when it gets warmer. 
That’s the simple part. 
We know the physics 
and the big question is 
only how deep 
it’s mixed down in the sea, 
so how many layers 
are expanding, really.
 
So we have several 
feedbacks which we are 
unraveling now, 
both the ice shelf 
melting feedback,
and melting in 
the Arctic sea ice, which 
leads to a warmer ocean 
and a change in climate 
in the Arctic. 
The acceleration 
of glaciers 
seems to be accelerated 
by the presence 
of a little bit of melting, 
which leads 
to further sea level rise.
We know we’re going 
to be pushed in 
this direction of a climate 
that we have not seen 
in several million years. 
Many scientists point out 
that the future 
sea level rise estimates 
made in the 2007 
4th Assessment Report 
of the Intergovernmental 
Panel on Climate Change 
were far too low, 
with the revised forecasts 
pointing to danger ahead 
for low-lying areas.  
In its last assessment, 
this group used 
several climate models, 
but all these models failed 
or were too conservative 
to really predict 
the evolution 
of the recent few years 
in terms of sea level rise. 
The sea level is rising 
faster than these models 
predicted in terms of 
the shrinking of 
summer ice in the Arctic. 
There is less ice 
in the Arctic in summer 
than these models predicted 
for the last few years. 
I’m one of the lead authors 
of the next report 
of the Intergovernmental 
Panel on Climate Change 
on this specific 
sea level chapter. 
There we will 
have to try to make 
a very thorough analysis 
of the sea level. 
The last IPCC report 
was good 
but the sea level was 
a clear underestimation 
of what we have to expect 
in the future. 
The reason I say this is 
that the last IPCC report 
said, in the next century 
we’re going to get 
20 centimeters 
to 60 centimeters 
in sea level rise globally. 
Now, in the last century, 
we had 15 to 20 
centimeters already.
The 20 to 60 
for the next century 
came from 
the different scenarios 
that we could have, 
the different 
global warming paths 
that we might be on. 
In the period from 
where the projection 
started in 2000, until 
the report was published 
in 2007, we had already 
underestimated 
the observed sea level 
by 40%. 
If you do already 
the first seven years 
by 40% wrong, 
it’s almost half wrong. 
So, the reason was simply 
that we didn’t have 
enough proper models 
for the great ice sheets in 
Greenland and Antarctica. 
These are the unknowns.
We will now pause 
for a moment and 
when we come back, 
we’ll have more about how 
the heating of our Earth 
is causing 
sea level changes.  
Please stay tuned 
to Supreme Master 
Television.
Welcome back to today’s 
Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home 
on Supreme Master 
Television 
where we are examining 
the important relationship 
between the oceans 
and our world’s climate.
During the past century, 
the global 
average sea level 
rose at a rate of about 
1.7 millimeters per year.  
The current average is 
3.1 millimeters per year.  
With the warming 
of the planet 
and the melting glaciers 
and ice sheets, 
one forecast by a UK and 
Finnish scientific team 
pegs the average 
global sea level 
to advance by 0.8 meters 
to 1.5 meters 
by the end of the century.  
Many major cities 
around the world, such as 
New York City, USA, 
are at one meter or less 
above sea level.
In the last ice age 
we had 120 to 130 meters 
less sea level compared 
to the present day. 
So, when you hear 
that we had 
15 to 20 centimeters
in the last century 
of sea level change, 
you get the feeling that 
we are only talking about 
centimeters all the time 
and that sounds like 
not so much. It is a lot. 
The ice melt in Greenland 
is important. 
The Greenland ice sheet 
is 3,000 meters thick. 
To the sea level rising, 
the most critical one 
today is Greenland. 
The last episode 
with a warmer globe 
than present was 
about 125,000 years ago, 
an interval which 
geologists refer to 
as the last interglacial. 
During this interval 
the Greenland ice sheet 
was significantly reduced 
because 
there was drastically 
different vegetation 
in southern Greenland 
than today. 
So it means 
that the southern part of 
the ice sheet had probably 
largely disappeared. 
And there was still 
a robust ice sheet, 
but in the northern part 
of the island. 
And it is an interval when 
the average sea level 
was about four meters 
above present. Okay. 
Minimum. Okay. 
Possibly more than 
four meters but it's a very 
conservative estimate. 
So it means that we have 
started now a process 
leading to a fast melting 
of part of this ice sheet, 
of the Greenland ice sheet 
due to global warming 
that is potentially leading 
to a higher sea level of 
few meters above present. 
In terms of how fast, 
again, it’s very… you know 
things accelerate. 
So perhaps 
a couple of years ago, 
a few years ago 
I would have said, 
"Well, maybe 
a few thousand years," 
to be prudent. 
Ah, now, 
it’s perhaps 2,000 years 
to see a very fast rise 
in sea level.
And well, it means 
that’s, at our time scale, 
that’s one generation 
or two generations or 
three generations, which 
is our real concern now. 
The rate 
of sea level increases 
may be fast enough 
to lead to really critical 
and difficult 
to solve problems 
in many countries 
of the world. Ok. 
Bangladesh for example 
just to mention one. 
The Antarctic is an
extremely sensitive area 
with respect 
to global warming. 
A recent study from 
the University of Toronto, 
Canada found that if 
a complete disintegration 
of the Western Antarctic 
Ice Sheet were to occur 
due to climate change, 
the Sheet’s sheer weight 
could cause 
Earth’s rotational axis 
to shift by 500 meters. 
The scientists also 
concluded that
such an event would 
cause an uneven global rise 
in sea level with the 
coastline of North America 
seeing a six meter rise, 
and the rest of the world 
seeing about 
a five meter rise.
In fact, the West Antarctic 
Ice Sheet has collapsed 
several times over 
the last five-million years.
When they occurred 
in the past, 
that meant the collapse 
of the West Antarctic 
Ice Sheet and 
three and a half meters of 
sea level rise from there, 
plus another 
three and a half from the
East Antarctic Ice Sheet. 
So there was 
about seven meters 
of sea level rise. 
Greenland and Antarctica 
each probably account 
for about 25% of 
the total sea level rise 
and sea level rise rates
have been going up
since the last
20 or 30 years or so. 
Prior to about again 1990, 
the sea level rise rate was 
something like between 
one and two millimeters 
per year.
Now the total 
sea level rise rate is 
between two and three 
millimeters per year and
we’re just getting started 
on this warming trend.
The problem is that 
Greenland and Antarctica 
have the ability 
to contribute much, much 
more ice to the ocean, 
which would cause 
the sea level rise rate 
to increase very rapidly. 
Warming of the oceans 
will increase 
as the pace of warming in 
the atmosphere increases 
but not at the rate 
that Greenland and
Antarctica can increase
their contribution of ice 
to the ocean.
So in the future, more 
and more of sea level rise 
will come from 
the ice sheets relative 
to the thermal expansion 
of the oceans. 
Which countries 
will be most affected 
by increasing sea levels? 
Several island nations 
such as 
the Maldives, Kiribati 
and Tuvalu are in danger 
of soon disappearing 
altogether. 
The President 
of the Maldives, 
His Excellency 
Mohamed Nasheed 
is looking for places 
to move his country’s 
entire population 
in anticipation 
of such an event. 
Professor Levermann’s 
research has closely 
examined this issue 
in terms of consequences 
for Europe 
and North America.
What we found was 
an increase mainly 
along the American 
and the European coasts. 
The strongest increase 
was around 
the Greenland coast. 
There are people living 
there, so it's important, 
the highly populated areas 
up to Florida (USA), 
or the entire US coast, 
the same 
for the European coast. 
US researchers 
recently did something 
slightly different; 
they projected 
global warming 
plus a weakening of the 
thermohaline circulation. 
They found the U.S. coast 
was very strongly affected. 
So these are 
the main regions 
that need to worry. 
That's the East coast 
of the U.S. and Canada 
and potentially 
the European coasts, too.
We sincerely thank the 
respected Earth scientists 
featured today for 
their insightful research 
on the relationship 
between the oceans 
and our global climate 
and for helping us 
better understand 
increasing sea levels and 
the serious consequences 
for life on our planet.
For more details 
on the scientists featured 
on today’s program, 
please visit 
the following websites:
Dr. Claude Hillaire-Marcel 
www.Professeurs.UQAM.ca
Professor 
Anders Levermann 
www.PIK-Potsdam.de
Dr. Ted Scambos 
NSIDC.org
Eco-wise viewers, 
thank you for joining us 
on today’s Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home. 
Coming up next is 
Enlightening Entertainment 
after Noteworthy News. 
May we all live 
sustainable lives 
to protect the oceans 
and curb climate change.
Mr. Laurent Imbault is 
a noted Canadian actor 
and comedian and 
founder of GoodnessTV, 
an Internet television station 
that broadcasts 
only good news. 
Through online media, 
Mr. Imbault seeks 
to improve our world.
The idea is to create 
a network of people 
sharing ideas, sharing 
know-how, knowledge, 
experiences, 
so that things can move 
a lot faster than 
they’re moving now. 
So GoodnessTV 
really wants to become 
‘goodness network’ 
where people can 
exchange all these ideas 
and grow faster.
Watch the second 
and final part of 
"Laurent Imbault 
and GoodnessTV: 
Uplifting the World" 
Sunday, August 8, 
on Good People, 
Good Works.