Abstract
Ice sheets in Antarctica and Greenland have continued to undergo rapid changes since the 1970s causing a significant rise in global mean sea level. The Ice Sheet Mass Balance Inter-comparison Exercise (IMBIE) community has produced reconciled estimates of ice sheet mass changes for both ice sheets from the 1970s till 2021 by combining more than 50 independent mass balance estimates produced from varied satellite observations. Ice sheet mass changes are driven by competing processes due to their interaction with the atmosphere (surface mass balance) and ocean (ice dynamics). Here, we present an updated IMBIE assessment and partition mass trends into their surface mass balance (SMB) and ice dynamics components. This new assessment shows that Antarctica and Greenland contributed 29.3 mm to the global mean sea level between 1979 and 2021. While in Antarctica, almost all ice losses were driven by ice dynamical imbalance, we find that 60 % of Greenland’s ice losses were caused by increased ice discharge with reduced SMB accounting for the remainder. This exercise reveals the different drivers of Antarctica and Greenland mass changes and highlights their high interannual variability. Finally, we are aiming at producing reconciled regional ice sheet mass balance estimates for the main drainage basins of Antarctica and Greenland for the first time and will be presenting preliminary results for some of the key regions of the ice sheets that have been undergoing rapid changes. Partitioning mass trends and producing regional assessments will contribute to a better understanding of the remaining differences between the different satellite geodesy techniques employed within IMBIE and will provide a key dataset for both the Earth Observation and ice sheet modelling communities. 
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