Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Swiss expert raises alarm as Alpine glacier melts away

- Agence France-Presse letters@hindustant­imes.com

ALETSCH GLACIER, SWITZERLAN­D: After hiking for hours across the mountain and a vast expanse of white, Swiss glaciologi­st Matthias Huss crouches down near the middle of the massive glacier and checks the measuremen­ts.

Analysis of the data gathered from Aletsch, the largest glacier in the Alps, paints a dire picture of the toll that the climate crisis is taking on the behemoth.

The Aletsch glacier alone holds about a fifth of the total ice volume found in all of Switzerlan­d’s around 1,800 glaciers.

But over the past decade, the glacier consisting of some 80sq km of ice and rock has seen 1.5m shaved off its thickness each year. The 41-year-old heads Glacier Monitoring in Switzerlan­d (Glamos), a scientific network documentin­g the shrinking of the Swiss glaciers in the face of a warming planet.

“The glaciers are truly a giant and visible thermomete­r,” he said, pointing out that it is “much more poignant to see a glacier shrinking in volume and thickness than to look at a graph showing temperatur­es rising”. “Glaciers are beautiful,” he added, accounting for the

often emotional response when people reflect on the shrinking and future disappeara­nce of the ice formations.

Glamos scientists monitor around 20 Swiss glaciers each year and have noted that since 2010, the frequency of years with extreme ice loss has accelerate­d dramatical­ly.

One such year was 2011, the next was 2015, and then 2017, 2018 and 2019 were each record breakers. While last year was not a year of extremes, Swiss glaciers still shed 2% of their total volume, Huss said.

Global warming is going so fast that a number of smaller glaciers have already disappeare­d. In September 2019, Huss participat­ed in a symbolic funeral for the Pizol glacier in northeaste­rn Switzerlan­d, at an altitude of around 2,700m.

“Since then, we have stopped active monitoring of Pizol. It no longer makes any sense,” Huss said. He plans to collect two final samples in a few weeks, but, he acknowledg­ed, “after that it will really be over”.

And Pizol will surely not be the last glacier to melt away, Huss said. “Over the next 10-20 years, there will certainly be other well-known glaciers that will disappear.”

 ?? AFP ?? The Aletsch glacier in Switzerlan­d.
AFP The Aletsch glacier in Switzerlan­d.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India