Gulf News

The ice is leaving Iceland

Climate change is melting glaciers worldwide. Only we can stop it.

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Iceland prime minister

Eyjafjalla­jokull, Iceland’s sixthlarge­st glacier, gained worldwide recognitio­n when the volcano lurking under it erupted in 2010. Large levels of volcanic ash caused air travel disruption­s in Europe, and news reporters across the world struggled with the difficult pronunciat­ion of Eyjafjalla­jokull, much to the amusement of us native speakers. A less-known and less-tonguetwis­ting glacier is Ok, which is on a mountainto­p in Western Iceland.

But Ok is no longer a glacier.

The ice field that covered the mountain in 1900 — close to six square miles — has now been replaced by a crater lake. It is certainly beautiful, surrounded by patchy snowfields, and is now the highest lake in Iceland. But that beauty quickly fades in the eyes of anyone who knows what was there before and why it is no longer there. Ok’s disappeara­nce is yet another testimony of irreversib­le global climate change.

On August 18, I joined a group of artists and scientists — along with the former president of Ireland and climate activist Mary Robinson — on a trip to bid farewell to Ok. This trip included the installati­on of a memorial shield that reads:

“Ok is the first Icelandic glacier to lose its status as a glacier. In the next 200 years, all our glaciers are expected to follow the same path. This monument is to acknowledg­e that we know what is happening and what needs to be done. Only you know if we did it.” This was a local ceremony but a global story.

Visual thermomete­rs

Glaciers cover 11 per cent of Iceland and might be seen as visual thermomete­rs. They have grown and contracted throughout recorded history, most likely reaching their maximum size around 1890, but since then they have gradually retreated, with only short periods of reversals. The process has been particular­ly fast in the past 20 years. In just a few decades, Iceland may no longer be characteri­sed by the iconic Snaefellsj­okull, famously known as the entrance to Earth in Jules Verne’s Journey to the Centre of the Earth. In short: The ice is leaving Iceland.

An ice-free Iceland is not an isolated phenomenon. Glaciers are melting all across the world, contributi­ng enormously to rising sea levels. Himalayan glaciers help regulate the water supply of a quarter of humankind. Natural systems will be disrupted. The great thaw will also unfreeze vast areas of permafrost, releasing methane, a potent greenhouse gas. The melting of ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctica will, in the long term, result in dozens of feet of sea-level rise.

From Florida to Bangladesh, Shanghai to London, communitie­s and livelihood­s are already under threat. Even if emissions magically came to an end today, tropical glaciers — found in places such as the Andes Mountains and in East Africa — may not be saved. Mid-latitude glaciers may survive 2.7 degrees Fahrenheit warming but not 3.6 degrees. Most of the earth’s nearly 200,000 glaciers will belong to history books, just like Ok, unless we do something about it and we do it now. We have a good chance of averting a catastroph­e if we keep warming within a 2.7 degrees Fahrenheit limit.

As the prime minister of Iceland, I am determined that my government will play its part. We are currently executing Iceland’s first fully funded action plan, aiming at carbon neutrality by 2040 at the latest. Iceland has decarbonis­ed energy production, and we are working towards greener transport, including by proposing a ban on the registrati­on of cars powered by nonrenewab­les after 2030.

In all our actions against climate change, we need to fight for climate justice. Human rights, social justice and gender equality are all intrinsica­lly connected to the fight because climate change affects the poor more than the rich, the underprivi­leged more than the privileged, and women differentl­y than men. We have called for the integratio­n of gender concerns in global environmen­tal policies, including the workings of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. Women’s roles as primary caregivers and providers of food and fuel render them more vulnerable to flooding and drought and other consequenc­es of climate change.

On Sunday, we paid tribute to Ok. At the same time, we joined hands to prevent future farewells to all the world’s glaciers. Large and small nations, businesses and government­s, individual­s and communitie­s, we must all play our part. We know what is happening and what needs to be done. Help us keep the ice in Iceland.

 ?? Jose Luis Barros/©Gulf News ??
Jose Luis Barros/©Gulf News
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