A groundbreaking study using NASA’s own satellite data has shown that Antarctica—the supposed “canary in the coal mine” for catastrophic global warming—has actually gained massive amounts of ice in recent years.
Despite high global temperatures and endless doomsday predictions of melting polar ice caps flooding coastal cities, the Antarctic Ice Sheet recorded a record-breaking mass gain from 2021 to 2023, adding over 100 billion tons of ice per year.
Published in March 2025 in Science China Earth Sciences by researchers from Tongji University, the peer-reviewed study analyzed more than two decades of data from NASA’s GRACE and GRACE Follow-On satellites.
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These instruments, designed specifically to track ice mass changes, revealed a dramatic reversal: after moderate losses early in the 2000s, Antarctica shifted to net ice gain at a rate of approximately 108 gigatons per year during 2021–2023. This gain was so significant that it temporarily offset global sea level rise by about 0.3 mm per year.
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Even more telling, previously unstable glaciers in East Antarctica—regions alarmists claimed were on the brink of collapse—reversed course entirely, flipping from accelerated loss to substantial growth. This isn’t some minor blip; it’s a complete turnaround that directly contradicts the narrative pushed for years: that rising CO2 levels are irreversibly melting Antarctica and dooming us to runaway sea level rise.
For context, alarmists have long pointed to Antarctica as proof of their theories, claiming ice loss was “accelerating” and contributing massively to rising oceans. But this new data shows the opposite happened during the exact period when global temperatures were supposedly at their hottest. The gain was driven by increased snowfall—a natural process that has always dominated Antarctica’s ice balance—but one that mainstream models failed to predict accurately.
Critics will rush to dismiss this as “temporary” or an “anomaly,” citing older long-term trends of net loss since 2002. Yet NASA’s own visualizations up to 2023 show an average annual loss of around 150 gigatons over two decades—hardly the apocalyptic meltdown promised. And with this multi-year gain erasing recent losses in key areas, the overall picture looks far less dire. Recent reports from 2024–2025 even note above-average snow accumulation continuing in parts of the continent.
This isn’t the first crack in the climate hoax facade. Remember the endless predictions of an “ice-free Arctic” that never materialized? Or the claims that Antarctic sea ice was vanishing, only for it to rebound in cycles? Time and again, data has exposed exaggerated models designed to scare the public into accepting trillions in green taxes and energy restrictions.

