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Melting of Earth's Ice Cover Reaches New High
by Lisa Mastny
The Earth's ice cover is melting in more places and at higher rates
than at any time since record keeping began. Reports from around the
world compiled by the Worldwatch Institute (see attached data table)
show that global ice melting accelerated during the 1990s-which was
also the warmest decade on record.
Scientists suspect that the enhanced melting is among the first observable
signs of human-induced global warming, caused by the unprecedented release
of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases over the past century.
Glaciers and other ice features are particularly sensitive to temperature
shifts.
The Earth's ice cover acts as a protective mirror, reflecting a large
share of the sun's heat back into
space and keeping the planet cool. Loss of the ice would not only affect
the global climate, but would
also raise sea levels and spark regional flooding, damaging property
and endangering lives. Large-scale melting would also threaten key water
supplies as well as alter the habitats of many of the world's plant
and animal species.
Some of the most dramatic reports come from the polar regions, which
are warming faster than the planet as a whole and have lost large amounts
of ice in recent decades. The Arctic sea ice, covering an area roughly
the size of the United States, shrunk by an estimated 6 percent between
1978 and 1996, losing an average of 34,300 square kilometers-an area
larger than the Netherlands-each year.
The Arctic sea ice has also thinned dramatically since the 1960s and
70s. Between this period and the mid-1990s, the average thickness dropped
from 3.1 meters to 1.8 meters-a decline of nearly 40 percent in less
than 30 years.
The Arctic's Greenland Ice Sheet-the largest mass of land-based ice
outside of Antarctica, with 8 percent of the world's ice-has thinned
more than a meter per year on average since 1993 along parts of its
southern and eastern edges.
The massive Antarctic ice cover, which averages 2.3 kilometers in thickness
and represents some 91 percent of Earth's ice, is also melting. So far,
most of the loss has occurred along the edges of the Antarctic Peninsula,
on the ice shelves that form when the land-based ice sheets flow into
the ocean and begin to float. Within the past decade, three ice shelves
have fully disintegrated: the Wordie, the Larsen A, and the Prince Gustav.
Two more, the Larsen B and the Wilkins, are in full retreat and are
expected to break up soon, having lost more than one-seventh of their
combined 21,000 square kilometers since late 1998-a loss the size of
Rhode Island. Icebergs as big as Delaware have also broken off Antarctica
in recent years, posing threats to open-water shipping.
Antarctica's vast land ice is also melting, although there is disagreement
over how quickly. One study
estimates that the Western Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS), the smaller of
the continent's two ice sheets, has retreated at an average rate of
122 meters a year for the past 7,500 years-and is in no imminent danger
of collapse. But other studies suggest that the sheet may break more
abruptly if melting accelerates. They point to signs of past collapse,
as well as to fast-moving ice streams within the sheet that could speed
ice melt, as evidence of potential instability.
Outside the poles, most ice melt has occurred in mountain and subpolar
glaciers, which have responded much more rapidly to temperature changes.
As a whole, the world's glaciers are now shrinking faster than they
are growing, and losses in 1997-98 were "extreme," according
to the World Glacier Monitoring Service. Scientists predict that up
to a quarter of global mountain glacier mass could disappear by 2050,
and up to one-half by 2100-leaving large patches only in Alaska, Patagonia,
and the Himalayas. Within the next 35 years, the Himalayan glacial area
alone is expected to shrink by one-fifth, to 100,000 square kilometers.
The disappearance of Earth's ice cover would significantly alter the
global climate-though the net
effects remain unknown. Ice, particularly polar ice, reflects large
amounts of solar energy back into
space, and helps keep the planet cool. When ice melts, however, this
exposes land and water surfaces that retain heat-leading to even more
melt and creating a feedback loop that accelerates the overall warming
process. But excessive ice melt in the Arctic could also have a cooling
effect in parts of Europe and the eastern United States, as the influx
of fresh water into the North Atlantic may disrupt ocean circulation
patterns that enable the warm Gulf Stream to flow north.
As mountain glaciers shrink, large regions that rely on glacial runoff
for water supply could experience severe shortages. The Quelccaya Ice
Cap, the traditional water source for Lima, Peru, is now retreating
by some 30 meters a year-up from only 3 meters a year before 1990-posing
a threat to the city's 10 million residents. And in northern India,
a region already facing severe water scarcity, an estimated 500 million
people depend on the tributaries of the glacier-fed Indus and Ganges
rivers for irrigation and drinking water. But as the Himalayas melt,
these rivers are expected to initially swell and then fall to dangerously
low levels, particularly in summer. (In 1999, the Indus reached record
high levels because of glacial melt.)
Rapid glacial melting can also cause serious flood damage, particularly
in heavily populated regions such as the Himalayas. In Nepal, a glacial
lake burst in 1985, sending a 15-meter wall of water rushing 90 kilometers
down the mountains, drowning people and destroying houses. A second
lake near the country's Imja Glacier has now grown to 50 hectares, and
is predicted to burst within the next five years, with similar consequences.
Large-scale ice melt would also raise sea levels and flood coastal areas,
currently home to about half the world's people. Over the past century,
melting in ice caps and mountain glaciers has contributed on average
about one-fifth of the estimated 10-25 centimeter (4-10 inch) global
sea level rise-with the rest caused by thermal expansion of the ocean
as the Earth warmed. But ice melt's share in sea level rise is increasing,
and will accelerate if the larger ice sheets crumble. Antarctica alone
is home to 70 percent of the planet's fresh water, and collapse of the
WAIS, an ice mass the size of Mexico, would raise sea levels by an estimated
6 meters-while melting of both Antarctic ice sheets would raise them
nearly 70 meters. (Loss of the Arctic sea ice or of the floating Antarctic
ice shelves would
have no effect on sea level because these already displace water.)
Wildlife is already suffering as a result of global ice melt-particularly
at the poles, where marine
mammals, seabirds, and other creatures depend on food found at the ice
edge. In northern Canada, reports of hunger and weight loss among polar
bears have been correlated with changes in the ice cover. And in Antarctica,
loss of the sea ice, together with rising air temperatures and increased
precipitation, is altering the habitats as well as feeding and breeding
patterns of penguins and seals.
TABLE 1: SELECTED EXAMPLES OF ICE MELT AROUND THE
WORLD
Name |
Location |
Measured Loss |
| Arctic Sea Ice |
Arctic Ocean |
Has shrunk by 6 percent since 1978, with a 14 percent
loss of thicker, year-round ice. Has thinned by 40
percent in less than 30 years. |
Greenland Ice Sheet
|
Greenland |
Has thinned by more than a meter a year on its
southern and eastern edges since 1993. |
| Columbia Glacier |
Alaska, United States
|
Has retreated nearly 13 kilometers since 1982. In
1999, retreat rate increased from 25 meters per day to 35 meters
per day. |
| Glacier National Park |
Rocky Mtns., United States |
Since 1850, the number of glaciers has dropped from 150 to fewer
than 50. Remaining glaciers could disappear completely in 30 years. |
| Antarctic Sea Ice |
Southern Ocean |
Ice to the west of the Antarctic Peninsula decreased
by some 20 percent between 1973 and 1993, and
continues to decline. |
| Pine Island Glacier |
West Antarctica |
Grounding line (where glacier hits ocean and floats)
retreated 1.2 kilometers a year between 1992 and 1996.
Ice thinned at a rate of 3.5 meters per year. |
| Larsen B Ice Shelf |
Antarctic Peninsula |
Calved a 200 km2 iceberg in early 1998. Lost an
additional 1,714 km2 during the 1998-1999 season, and
300 km2 so far during the 1999-2000 season. |
| Tasman Glacier |
New Zealand |
Terminus has retreated 3 kilometers since 1971, and
main front has retreated 1.5 kilometers since 1982. Has thinned
by up to 200 meters on average since the 1971-82 period. Icebergs
began to break off in 1991, accelerating the collapse. |
| Meren, Carstenz, and Northwall Firn Glaciers |
Irian Jaya, Indonesia |
Rate of retreat increased to 45 meters a year in 1995, up from
only 30 meters a year in 1936. Glacial area shrank by some 84 percent
between 1936 and 1995. Meren Glacier is now close to disappearing
altogether. |
| Dokriani Bamak Glacier |
Himalayas, India |
Retreated by 20 meters in 1998, compared with an
average retreat of 16.5 meters over the previous 5 years. |
| Duosuogang Peak |
Ulan Ula Mtns., China |
Glaciers have shrunk by some 60 percent since the early 1970s. |
| Tien Shan Mountains |
Central Asia |
Twenty-two percent of glacial ice volume has
disappeared in the past 40 years. |
Caucasus Mountains
|
Russia |
Glacial volume has declined by 50 percent in the past
century. |
| Alps |
Western Europe |
Glacial area has shrunk by 35 to 40 percent and volume has declined
by more than 50 percent since 1850. Glaciers could be reduced to
only a small fraction of their present mass within decades. |
| Mt. Kenya |
Kenya |
Largest glacier has lost 92 percent of its mass since
the late 1800s. |
| Speka Glacier |
Uganda |
Retreated by more than 150 meters between 1977 and
1990, compared with only 35-45 meters between 1958 and 1977. |
| Upsala Glacier |
Argentina |
Has retreated 60 meters a year on average over the last 60 years,
and rate is accelerating. |
| Quelccaya Glacier |
Andes, Peru |
Rate of retreat increased to 30 meters a year in the
1990s, up from only 3 meters a year between the 1970s and 1990. |
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