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Report: 60% of ice at Los Glaciares National Park could be lost by 2100

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Nearly half of the glaciers in World Heritage sites will disappear by the end of this century if green house gas emissions continue unchecked, a report said Tuesday, with a severe warning issued for the Los Glaciares National Park in Santa Cruz Province.

Argentina’s famous national park – which includes the iconic Perito Moreno glacier – contains some of the largest glaciers on the planet and “a very large ice loss – about 60 percent of the current volume – is predicted by 2100 withinth is site,”there port’ s authors wrote.

A new study from the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature (IUCN) focused on the 46 World Heritage sites where

glaciers are found, including Grosser Aletschgle­tscher in the Swiss Alps, Greenland’s Jakobshavn Glacier and Khumbu Glacier in the Himalayas.

Using a variety of data and ad van cedmodelli­ng,t he authors “predict glacier extinction by 2100 under a high emission scenario in 21 of the 46 natural World Heritage sites where glaciers are currently found,” the IUCN said.

That“high emission scenario” refers to the status quo, where the commitment­s made under the 2015 Paris climate pactare not met.

Sites likely to see the most severe ice-loss are Los Glaciares National Park in Argentina, the experts warned, as well as Waterton Glacier Internatio­nal Peace Park, which straddles the Canada-US border.

The disappeara­nce of small glaciers in the Pyrenees - Mont Perdu World Heritage site could happen before 2040, according to IUCN projection­s.

Even if nations deliver on the terms of the Paris agreement, eight of the 46 World Heritage sites analysed in the report will still be ice-free by the year 2100, IUCN added.

“Losing these iconic glaciers would be a tragedy and have major consequenc­es for the availabili­ty of water resources, sea level rise and weather patterns,” Peter Shadie, director of IUCN’s World Heritage Programme, said in the statement.

“This unpreceden­ted decline could also jeopardise the listing of the sites in question on the World Heritage list. States must reinforce their commitment­s to combat climate change and step up efforts to preserve these glaciers for future generation­s,” he added.

IUCN, widely-known for its “redlist”of en dan ge red species, has developed the first ever inventory of the 19,000 glaciers spread across 46 World Heritage sites.

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