Dubai Telegraph - Icy reception for plan to 'save' Venezuela's last glacier

EUR -
AED 4.35335
AFN 77.050797
ALL 96.614026
AMD 452.873985
ANG 2.121943
AOA 1087.00321
ARS 1723.800654
AUD 1.702936
AWG 2.136666
AZN 2.019869
BAM 1.955248
BBD 2.406031
BDT 145.978765
BGN 1.990709
BHD 0.449191
BIF 3539.115218
BMD 1.18539
BND 1.512879
BOB 8.254703
BRL 6.231008
BSD 1.194568
BTN 109.699013
BWP 15.630651
BYN 3.402439
BYR 23233.647084
BZD 2.402531
CAD 1.615035
CDF 2684.909135
CHF 0.915881
CLF 0.026011
CLP 1027.058063
CNY 8.240537
CNH 8.248946
COP 4354.94563
CRC 591.535401
CUC 1.18539
CUP 31.412839
CVE 110.234327
CZK 24.334287
DJF 212.720809
DKK 7.470097
DOP 74.383698
DZD 153.702477
EGP 55.903178
ERN 17.780852
ETB 185.572763
FJD 2.613371
FKP 0.859325
GBP 0.865754
GEL 3.194674
GGP 0.859325
GHS 12.974143
GIP 0.859325
GMD 86.533903
GNF 10372.164298
GTQ 9.16245
GYD 249.920458
HKD 9.257838
HNL 31.365884
HRK 7.536597
HTG 156.336498
HUF 381.328619
IDR 19883.141804
ILS 3.663335
IMP 0.859325
INR 108.679593
IQD 1553.453801
IRR 49934.560565
ISK 144.985527
JEP 0.859325
JMD 187.197911
JOD 0.840489
JPY 183.433247
KES 152.915746
KGS 103.662825
KHR 4768.236408
KMF 491.93733
KPW 1066.949348
KRW 1719.752641
KWD 0.36382
KYD 0.995519
KZT 600.800289
LAK 25485.888797
LBP 101410.128375
LKR 369.427204
LRD 219.593979
LSL 19.132649
LTL 3.500149
LVL 0.717031
LYD 7.495914
MAD 10.835985
MDL 20.092409
MGA 5260.173275
MKD 61.631889
MMK 2489.374007
MNT 4229.125697
MOP 9.606327
MRU 47.30937
MUR 53.852723
MVR 18.32658
MWK 2059.023112
MXN 20.70407
MYR 4.672854
MZN 75.580924
NAD 18.967522
NGN 1643.520192
NIO 43.508231
NOK 11.437875
NPR 175.519161
NZD 1.96876
OMR 0.458133
PAB 1.194573
PEN 3.994177
PGK 5.066955
PHP 69.837307
PKR 331.998194
PLN 4.215189
PYG 8001.773454
QAR 4.316051
RON 5.097064
RSD 117.111851
RUB 90.544129
RWF 1742.915022
SAR 4.446506
SBD 9.544303
SCR 17.200951
SDG 713.016537
SEK 10.580086
SGD 1.505332
SHP 0.88935
SLE 28.834661
SLL 24857.038036
SOS 677.454816
SRD 45.104693
STD 24535.182964
STN 24.493185
SVC 10.452048
SYP 13109.911225
SZL 19.132635
THB 37.411351
TJS 11.151397
TMT 4.148866
TND 3.37248
TOP 2.854135
TRY 51.47818
TTD 8.110743
TWD 37.456003
TZS 3052.380052
UAH 51.199753
UGX 4270.811618
USD 1.18539
UYU 46.357101
UZS 14603.874776
VES 410.075543
VND 30749.020682
VUV 141.78282
WST 3.21762
XAF 655.774526
XAG 0.014004
XAU 0.000244
XCD 3.203577
XCG 2.153028
XDR 0.815573
XOF 655.774526
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.508153
ZAR 19.136335
ZMK 10669.938133
ZMW 23.443477
ZWL 381.695147
  • RBGPF

    1.3800

    83.78

    +1.65%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RIO

    -4.1000

    91.03

    -4.5%

  • VOD

    -0.0600

    14.65

    -0.41%

  • AZN

    0.1800

    92.77

    +0.19%

  • RELX

    -0.3700

    35.8

    -1.03%

  • GSK

    0.9400

    51.6

    +1.82%

  • NGG

    0.2000

    85.27

    +0.23%

  • BTI

    0.4600

    60.68

    +0.76%

  • CMSC

    0.0500

    23.76

    +0.21%

  • RYCEF

    -0.4300

    16

    -2.69%

  • BCE

    0.3700

    25.86

    +1.43%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    24.05

    -0.17%

  • BCC

    0.5100

    80.81

    +0.63%

  • JRI

    0.1400

    13.08

    +1.07%

  • BP

    -0.1600

    37.88

    -0.42%

Icy reception for plan to 'save' Venezuela's last glacier
Icy reception for plan to 'save' Venezuela's last glacier / Photo: Jose Manuel Romero - Jose Manuel Romero/AFP/File

Icy reception for plan to 'save' Venezuela's last glacier

A small patch of ice among bare rock is all that remains of Venezuela’s last glacier, which the government hopes to restore to its former glory using a geothermal blanket.

Text size:

Experts say that would be too little too late.

While glacier melt is a global phenomenon blamed on climate change, Venezuela is the first country in the Andes mountain range -- which stretches all the way to Chile in the south -- to lose all its glaciers.

Venezuela has lost five in total, adding up to some 1,000 hectares of ice, in the last century or so.

"In Venezuela there are no more glaciers," Julio Cesar Centeno, a university professor and advisor to the UN Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED), told AFP.

"What we have is a piece of ice that is 0.4 percent of its original size."

Centeno and other experts are convinced the loss of La Corona glacier on Humboldt peak, some 4,900 meters (more than 16,000 feet) above sea level, is irreversible.

But the government announced a plan in December to slow and even reverse the thaw by covering the area with a thermal mesh made of polypropylene plastic warding off the Sun's rays.

The cover was delivered to Humboldt peak by helicopter in 35 separate pieces, each measuring 2.75 meters by 80 meters, in December, but the government has not said whether it has already been unrolled.

Similar covers are used in European countries, mainly to protect ski slopes in warmer weather.

"It allows us to maintain the temperature of the area and prevent the entire glacier from melting," said Jehyson Guzman, governor of the western state of Merida that used to be home to Venezuela's glaciers.

- Nothing left to save -

But scientists of the University of Los Andes (ULA) are skeptical.

They say La Corona ceased to be a glacier since shrinking to just two hectares of the 450 hectares it used to cover. Scientists use a guideline of 10 hectares as the minimum size of a glacier.

Before La Corona, Venezuela also lost its glaciers on the peaks of El Leon, La Concha, El Toro and Bolivar.

"It is an illusory thing, a hallucination, it is completely absurd," said Centeno of the government's plan.

He and a team of other scientists will ask Venezuela's supreme court to scrap the project, which they say could have other, negative, impacts as the plastic blanket degrades over time.

"These micro plastics are practically invisible, they end up in the soil and from there they go to crops, lagoons, into the air, so people will end up eating and breathing that," he said.

Enrique La Marca, zoologist and ecologist, fears the cover could harm rare species of mosses and lichens, even hummingbirds that call the rocky environment home.

"That life will die because it will not have the necessary oxygen," he said.

- An ice remnant -

The most optimistic estimates give the remaining ice-cover "four to five years" before disappearing completely, said La Marca, who researches the impacts of glacier melt due to climate change.

Some calculations point to a mere two years.

"It’s an ice remnant," not a glacier, added physicist Alejandra Melfo, a ULA expert on the topic.

Forestry engineer and mountaineer Susana Rodriguez said the disappearance of La Corona will also affect Venezuelan tourism, as many people who used to climb the Humboldt peak did so on the ice.

"Now everything is rock, and what remains is so deteriorated that it is risky to step on it. There are cracks," said Rodriguez, who has accompanied several outings on the glacier.

G.Gopinath--DT