Nearly 40% of the World’s Glaciers Are Already Doomed, Scientists Say
- Scientists published a study in Science showing that 39 percent of the world’s glacier mass is already committed to melting globally.
- The study modeled over 200,000 glaciers across eight glacier models and simulated ice loss under various climate scenarios, with some regional losses more severe than others.
- If current climate policies remain unchanged, global temperatures are expected to rise by 2.7 degrees Celsius by 2100, resulting in the loss of approximately 76 percent of today’s glacier volume and causing sea levels to increase by a minimum of 113 millimeters .
- Co-Lead author Lilian Schuster highlighted that even very small increments in temperature increases have significant impacts, while co-author Harry Zekollari noted that meeting ambitious climate goals could still preserve many crucial glaciers.
- The findings suggest urgent action is needed to protect glaciers that support water supplies, ecosystems, and coastal stability for billions of people worldwide.
78 Articles
78 Articles
More than twenty experts and scientists from 10 countries have participated in a study in which they have analyzed the present and future ice of glaciers and have come to a clear conclusion after their analysis: if more firm and forceful actions were carried out to stop climate change, more than half of that glacial mass could be preserved in the coming decades. However, if not and continue to do nothing while the world heats up, the reality of …
39 percent of the 2020 amount will definitely melt permanently, but if current climate policy continues, this number could be 76 percent.
By Issy Ronald, CNN The world's glaciers are in a sorry state, with nearly 40% of their total mass already doomed to melt even if global temperatures were to stop rising immediately, according to a new study. Researchers estimate that glaciers will eventually lose 39% of their mass by 2020, a trend that is already irreversible no matter what comes next and will likely contribute to a 113 millimeter rise in global sea levels. The loss increases t…
New study: Significant global glacier loss inevitable
If global temperatures rise by 2.7 degrees Celsius – in line with current climate policy – only a quarter of the glacier masses will be left. This is the result of an international study involving the University of Bremen, which has been published in Science journal. If global temperatures rise by 2.7 degrees Celsius – in line with current climate policy – only a quarter of the glacier masses will be left. This is the res…
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