Half of world's glaciers expected to vanish by 2100: Study
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Glacier loss would also exacerbate sea level rise.
PHOTO: AFP
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WASHINGTON - Half of the Earth’s glaciers, notably smaller ones, are destined to disappear by the end of the century because of climate change, but limiting global warming could save others, according to a new study.
The findings, published in the journal Science on Thursday, provide the most comprehensive look so far at the future of the world’s 215,000 glaciers.
The authors emphasised the importance of restricting greenhouse gas emissions to limit the consequences from glacier melt, such as sea level rise and depletion of water resources.
To help orient policymakers, the study looked at the impact of four scenarios on glaciers, where global mean temperature change is 1.5 deg C
“Every degree increase produces more melt and loss,” said Professor Regine Hock of the University of Oslo and University of Alaska Fairbanks, a co-author of the study.
“But that also means if you reduce the temperature increase, you can also reduce that mass loss,” Prof Hock told AFP. “So in that sense, there is also a little bit of hope.”
Even if global temperature rise is limited to 1.5 deg C above pre-industrial levels – the most ambitious goal of the Paris Agreement – the researchers estimated that 49 per cent of the world’s glaciers would vanish by the year 2100.
That would represent about 26 per cent of the world’s glacier mass because the smallest glaciers would be those first impacted.
Global mean temperature is currently estimated to be increasing by 2.7 deg C, which would result in a near-complete loss of glaciers in Central Europe, Western Canada and the continental United States and New Zealand.
“Regions with relatively little ice like the European Alps, the Caucasus, the Andes, or the western US, they lose almost all the ice by the end of the century almost no matter what the emission scenario is,” Prof Hock said. “So those glaciers, they’re more or less doomed.”
Under the worst-case scenario – global temperature rise of 4 deg C – giant glaciers such as those in Alaska would be more affected and 83 per cent of glaciers would disappear by the end of the century.
Glacier loss would also exacerbate sea level rise.
“The glaciers that we are studying are only 1 per cent of all ice on Earth,” said Prof Hock. “Much less than the Greenland ice sheet and the Antarctic ice sheet.
“But they have contributed to sea level rise almost just as much as the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets together in the last three decades,” she said.
Warming of 1.5 deg C would lead to a rise in average sea levels of 9cm while temperatures 4 deg C higher would cause 15cm of sea level rise.
“It doesn’t sound very much, 9cm up to 15cm,” Prof Hock said. “But it’s not global sea level that is that much of a concern... It’s mostly associated storm surges,” she said, which have the potential to cause “a lot more damage”.
The disappearance of glaciers will also have an impact on water resources because they provide freshwater for some two billion people.
“The glaciers compensate for the loss of water in summer when it’s not raining much and it’s hot,” Prof Hock said.
The study’s projections, which are more pessimistic than those of UN climate experts, were reached through observations of the mass of each glacier through the decades and computer simulations.
Despite the alarming findings, Prof Hock said “it is possible to reduce the mass loss by human action”.
“If it happens is, of course, a different question,” she said. “If that happens is, of course, up to the policymakers.” AFP

