Dubai Telegraph - Two 'catastrophic' years melt away 10% of Swiss glacier volume: study

EUR -
AED 4.268707
AFN 77.11863
ALL 96.578284
AMD 444.292106
ANG 2.08066
AOA 1065.870038
ARS 1673.767605
AUD 1.751218
AWG 2.093673
AZN 1.977165
BAM 1.955765
BBD 2.345058
BDT 142.287472
BGN 1.955749
BHD 0.438149
BIF 3440.753665
BMD 1.162344
BND 1.50978
BOB 8.062857
BRL 6.316638
BSD 1.164379
BTN 104.69814
BWP 15.518724
BYN 3.36614
BYR 22781.949209
BZD 2.341758
CAD 1.610655
CDF 2592.028424
CHF 0.937227
CLF 0.027442
CLP 1076.540474
CNY 8.210334
CNH 8.207691
COP 4484.766183
CRC 569.289885
CUC 1.162344
CUP 30.802125
CVE 110.263041
CZK 24.250009
DJF 207.336316
DKK 7.468231
DOP 74.978668
DZD 151.23335
EGP 55.263207
ERN 17.435165
ETB 180.836787
FJD 2.640611
FKP 0.872684
GBP 0.873949
GEL 3.126216
GGP 0.872684
GHS 13.308764
GIP 0.872684
GMD 85.433948
GNF 10121.863695
GTQ 8.918842
GYD 243.555672
HKD 9.044887
HNL 30.666455
HRK 7.533617
HTG 152.487947
HUF 383.703786
IDR 19397.551173
ILS 3.747503
IMP 0.872684
INR 104.574203
IQD 1525.272899
IRR 48934.696893
ISK 148.803624
JEP 0.872684
JMD 186.30669
JOD 0.82414
JPY 182.108003
KES 150.546916
KGS 101.647227
KHR 4662.917149
KMF 492.834367
KPW 1046.10593
KRW 1711.273244
KWD 0.356991
KYD 0.970283
KZT 600.459331
LAK 25251.551329
LBP 104266.847382
LKR 359.373615
LRD 205.506349
LSL 19.852647
LTL 3.4321
LVL 0.70309
LYD 6.332887
MAD 10.775509
MDL 19.770649
MGA 5194.907697
MKD 61.53326
MMK 2440.976331
MNT 4123.163155
MOP 9.332434
MRU 46.235178
MUR 53.642424
MVR 17.89507
MWK 2018.964127
MXN 21.166867
MYR 4.789987
MZN 74.285488
NAD 19.852647
NGN 1688.246927
NIO 42.849423
NOK 11.809482
NPR 167.517024
NZD 2.015976
OMR 0.446918
PAB 1.164379
PEN 3.91513
PGK 4.940912
PHP 68.892529
PKR 326.394101
PLN 4.227818
PYG 8141.855335
QAR 4.243825
RON 5.089443
RSD 117.450206
RUB 89.733036
RWF 1694.669889
SAR 4.361785
SBD 9.566782
SCR 15.824587
SDG 699.140491
SEK 10.894055
SGD 1.507822
SHP 0.872059
SLE 28.010252
SLL 24373.77763
SOS 664.288197
SRD 44.890323
STD 24058.181228
STN 24.499565
SVC 10.187819
SYP 12851.993865
SZL 19.849647
THB 37.008933
TJS 10.729363
TMT 4.079829
TND 3.422439
TOP 2.798646
TRY 49.511451
TTD 7.88586
TWD 36.294237
TZS 2850.196151
UAH 49.152727
UGX 4124.926708
USD 1.162344
UYU 45.498996
UZS 13975.751678
VES 299.427209
VND 30648.114581
VUV 141.392533
WST 3.237719
XAF 655.945345
XAG 0.019032
XAU 0.000276
XCD 3.141294
XCG 2.098463
XDR 0.815786
XOF 655.945345
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.248163
ZAR 19.821338
ZMK 10462.494369
ZMW 26.925522
ZWL 374.274406
  • RBGPF

    -1.0600

    78.05

    -1.36%

  • RELX

    0.0600

    39.54

    +0.15%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • AZN

    -1.4600

    89.82

    -1.63%

  • CMSC

    0.0200

    23.24

    +0.09%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2300

    14.6

    -1.58%

  • RIO

    1.3800

    74.4

    +1.85%

  • BTI

    -0.1200

    57.29

    -0.21%

  • NGG

    -0.4400

    74.89

    -0.59%

  • GSK

    -1.2000

    47.27

    -2.54%

  • CMSD

    0.0500

    23.22

    +0.22%

  • JRI

    -0.0190

    13.701

    -0.14%

  • BCE

    -0.1900

    23.15

    -0.82%

  • BCC

    0.1900

    72

    +0.26%

  • VOD

    0.0000

    12.5

    0%

  • BP

    -0.2300

    35.55

    -0.65%

Two 'catastrophic' years melt away 10% of Swiss glacier volume: study
Two 'catastrophic' years melt away 10% of Swiss glacier volume: study / Photo: Fabrice COFFRINI - AFP/File

Two 'catastrophic' years melt away 10% of Swiss glacier volume: study

Two consecutive years of extreme warming in the Alps have obliterated 10 percent of Swiss glacier volume -- the same amount lost in the three decades prior to 1990, a report revealed Thursday.

Text size:

Amid growing concerns over the dire toll of climate change, the study by the Cryospheric Commission (CC) of the Swiss Academy of Sciences showed a dramatic glacial retreat, and warned the situation would only get worse.

"Swiss glaciers are melting at a rapidly increasing rate," it said in a statement.

2022 marked the worst year on record for glacier melt in the Swiss Alps, with six percent of the total ice volume lost.

The glaciers have not fared much better this year, the CC report showed, with another four percent of ice volume destroyed, "representing the second largest decline since measurements began".

"The acceleration is dramatic, with as much ice being lost in only two years as was the case between 1960 and 1990," it said.

The result of two consecutive extreme years had been collapsing glacier tongues and some smaller glaciers vanishing all together.

"All glaciers melted a lot," Matthias Huss, head of Glacier Monitoring in Switzerland (GLAMOS), told AFP.

"But for the small glaciers, (the) melting is especially dramatic because these small glaciers are really disappearing right now."

- 'Dead ice' -

GLAMOS, which monitors 176 of Switzerland's some 1,400 glaciers, recently halted measurements at the St. Annafirn glacier in the central Swiss canton of Uri since it had all but disappeared.

"We just had some dead ice left," Huss lamented.

The massive glacier loss seen in Switzerland was linked in large part to a winter with very low snow volumes, as well as soaring summer temperatures.

"It's a combination of climate change that makes such extreme events more likely, and the very bad combination of meteorological extremes," Huss explained.

"If we continue at this rate... we will see every year such bad years."

Scientists have already warned that the Swiss glaciers could all but disappear by the end of the century without more action to rein in global warming.

"We have seen such strong climate changes in the last years that it's really possible to imagine this country without any glaciers," Huss said.

- 'Stabilise the climate' -

He stressed the need to "stabilise the climate by bringing the CO2 emissions to zero as soon as possible".

But Huss acknowledged that even if the world managed to meet the Paris targets of limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels, only around a third of glacier volume in Switzerland would be saved.

That means that "all the small glaciers will be gone anyway, and the big glaciers will be much smaller", he said, but stressed that at least "there will be some ice in the highest regions of the Alps and some glaciers that we can show to our grandchildren."

This year's melt impacted glaciers across Switzerland, with those in the south and the east of the country particularly hard-hit.

The average ice thickness loss there was up to three metres (9.8 feet) and was "considerably higher than the values recorded in the hot summer of 2003", the researchers said.

The study showed that even some glaciers above 3,200 metres (10,500 feet), which until recently had "preserved their equilibrium", had seen several metres of ice melt away.

The year was marked by barely any precipitation at all over the 2022-23 winter months, meaning far less snow cover than usual, followed by the third-warmest summer in the Alps since measurements began.

It got so warm that at one stage, the freezing point above the mountain range rose to 5,298 metres (17,381 feet) -- way above the highest peaks and beating by far the zero-degree line record.

I.Mansoor--DT