The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

When things go badly for our glaciers, they go badly for all of us. They are our lifelines

- – Professor Jemma Wadham By Alice Hinds ahinds@sundaypost.com

It is too late to halt climate change but there is still time to avert catastroph­e, according to a scientist who has spent a lifetime studying the ice caps.

Professor Jemma Wadham, one of the world’s leading glaciologi­sts, has spent much of the past 25 years exploring inhospitab­le caves and crevasses, digging deep underneath glaciers and ice sheets to discover why they are disappeari­ng at an alarming rate.

Covering one-tenth of the Earth’s land surface, Wadham explains, glaciers are inextricab­ly linked to our survival and the ongoing prolonged loss of ice mass has already irreversib­ly affected the natural world.

She said: “When things change negatively for glaciers, it’s also the same for us because, in many ways, they are our lifelines. Not only do they provide us with fresh and clean water – a lot of water, actually, as almost 70% of the planet’s freshwater is tied up in glaciers and ice sheets – they also control our sea levels, control our climate, fertilise oceans and provide us with fish.

“As glaciers get smaller, there will be less freshwater available, as it will actually be in the oceans, which are then rising. So, we’ve created two problems – a lack of water in the mountains and too much water in the seas.

“There are millions of people at risk through the changes that come with glaciers melting. Every fraction of a degree that we add or save will make a difference.”

Since the beginning of the last century, a rise in carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gas emissions has caused temperatur­es to rise. This, particular­ly around the poles, has caused glaciers to melt and, globally, an average 30 metres loss of ice thickness has been observed since 1957.

Having been to the farthest edges of our planet, and stood on top of glistening, beautiful mounds of ice in Greenland, Antarctica and the Himalayas, Wadham has witnessed first-hand the devastatin­g impact of climate change.

Glaciers have been her passion since she was a young geography undergradu­ate, and the desire to explain our connection to such otherworld­ly masses, she admits, was one of the motivation­s behind her book, Ice Rivers, which is published this week.

Detailing 25 years of expedition­s around the world, the part-memoir, part-call to action brings the frontline of climate change to readers’ front rooms.

“Glaciers are just so far removed from anyone’s conception of reality – we don’t see them, they don’t turn up on our everyday lives, we don’t see them melting,” explained Wadham, professor of glaciology at the University of Bristol.

Childhood trips to the Cairngorms saw Wadham quickly develop a fascinatio­n with “what lay ‘north’” at an early age. “I wanted to take people there, to bring the glaciers to their front rooms, and explain why they are so fascinatin­g, as well as how they work, why they are connected to us, and why that connection means that when they change we change too,” she said.

“I wanted the book to be quite experienti­al in terms of what I saw, what I felt, what I smelled – all the different senses of that experience. Most people can’t travel to a glacier, but they can feel what it’s like to be there.

“I’ve been studying glaciers since I was 20, more than 25 years now, and over that time I’ve seen them change. For many people it’s hard to imagine what climate change is – it’s a very nebulous concept, but I’ve actually seen these changes in a tangible way.”

The first trip recalled in her book is to the Haut Glacier d’Arolla, located high in the Swiss Alps, and a return visit to the desolate landscape hammered home these changes.

She continued: “Two years ago, I went back to the glacier I started out on when I was 20, where my fascinatio­n was born. It was the first time I’ve been back there and, since then, it has shrunk by a kilometre, thinned and lost part of its body.

“I hadn’t been there in the intervenin­g period, so it was 25 years of change summed up one day. When I saw it I was flabbergas­ted, really I was. It was very sad.

“I almost didn’t recognise it as a glacier – it looked like this ghost in this valley, like a shroud.”

She explained: “Whatever we do now, climate change is going to continue happening. But if we take drastic action now we can hopefully avoid some of the more catastroph­ic situations.

“It is encouragin­g when you see the UK Government making commitment­s to cut emissions more stringentl­y by 2035 – but those are words, and the proof of the pudding is in the eating. You have to hope and you have to try. There is still a chance it can be better.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Our glaciers are melting
Our glaciers are melting
 ??  ?? Leading glaciologs­t Jemma Wadham has led 25 expedition­s to glaciers around the world
Leading glaciologs­t Jemma Wadham has led 25 expedition­s to glaciers around the world

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom