China Daily

New warning on rapid melting of glaciers

- By KARL WILSON in Sydney karlwilson@chinadaily­apac.com

While a great deal of attention has been focused on the melting of the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets, a new study has warned that the world’s glaciers are melting faster and contributi­ng more to rising sea levels.

Scientists say the loss is the equivalent of submerging the entire landmass of England under two meters of water every year.

Sue Cook, an Antarctic glaciologi­st with the University of Tasmania, Australia, told China Daily that glaciers in every region of the world have been thinning, generally at increasing rates.

“This mass loss makes an important contributi­on to global sea level rise. But I think it’s also worth highlighti­ng that the shrinking of glaciers presents other urgent risks.”

About 2 billion people worldwide depend on meltwater from glaciers and snow packs for drinking water, irrigation, or power generation, she said.

“As glaciers shrink, this water supply will be placed under threat.”

Between 2000 and 2019 glaciers lost 267 gigatons of ice a year, equivalent to 21 percent of sea-level rise, according to the study “Accelerate­d Global Glacier Mass Loss in the Early 21st Century”, published in the science journal Nature.

The authors mapped the world’s 271,175 glaciers using more than 500,000 satellite images from 2000 to 2019.

Estimates validated

They validated their estimates with available independen­t, highprecis­ion measuremen­ts and calculated the volume and mass change of individual glaciers.

The study is the most comprehens­ive yet of how glaciers have changed this century, and that it “makes for disturbing reading”, Cook said.

A special report titled “Ocean and Cryosphere in a Changing Climate” by the UN Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change said recently that in some regions, glaciers could lose more than 80 percent of their current mass by 2100, with impacts on agricultur­e, local ecosystems, tourism, and socioecono­mic developmen­t.

Studies like the one published in Nature are difficult to undertake because glaciers are “often found in hard-to-reach places”, Cook said.

“Although satellite records allow glaciologi­sts to study broader areas, they often suffer from poor resolution and time coverage.”

A comprehens­ive study like this one is “enormously valuable, because it allows us to take stock of how changing environmen­ts combine to make a big global impact”.

Scientists say that as a cause of sea-level rise, glacier loss was second only to thermal expansion, which is prompted by higher ocean temperatur­es.

The lead author, Romain Hugonnet, of the University of Toulouse, France, said the data represents an urgent warning.

“A doubling of the thinning rates in 20 years for glaciers outside Greenland and Antarctica tells us we need to change the way we live. We need to act now. It can be difficult to get the public to understand why glaciers are important because they seem so remote, but they affect many things in the global water cycle including regional hydrology, and by changing too rapidly, can lead to the alteration or collapse of downstream ecosystems.”

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