The Prague Post - Swiss glaciers melting away at record rate

EUR -
AED 4.311101
AFN 76.888269
ALL 96.317334
AMD 444.997082
ANG 2.101352
AOA 1076.454519
ARS 1677.85032
AUD 1.712792
AWG 2.114758
AZN 1.995212
BAM 1.961494
BBD 2.354879
BDT 143.566737
BGN 1.971392
BHD 0.442618
BIF 3462.542969
BMD 1.173887
BND 1.500725
BOB 8.127176
BRL 6.211153
BSD 1.169197
BTN 107.455049
BWP 15.541661
BYN 3.307062
BYR 23008.19487
BZD 2.351582
CAD 1.617294
CDF 2559.07505
CHF 0.928317
CLF 0.02593
CLP 1023.870231
CNY 8.186225
CNH 8.171249
COP 4230.103582
CRC 577.004777
CUC 1.173887
CUP 31.108019
CVE 110.521047
CZK 24.257505
DJF 208.2113
DKK 7.468706
DOP 73.656783
DZD 152.260241
EGP 55.348768
ERN 17.608312
ETB 182.44931
FJD 2.641595
FKP 0.870197
GBP 0.868125
GEL 3.157266
GGP 0.870197
GHS 12.766018
GIP 0.870197
GMD 85.693681
GNF 10242.253057
GTQ 9.001593
GYD 245.527015
HKD 9.153511
HNL 30.84153
HRK 7.534709
HTG 153.169844
HUF 382.26766
IDR 19774.017437
ILS 3.688789
IMP 0.870197
INR 107.818072
IQD 1531.685408
IRR 49450.010844
ISK 146.00833
JEP 0.870197
JMD 184.101992
JOD 0.832274
JPY 185.608053
KES 151.431513
KGS 102.655993
KHR 4706.001093
KMF 493.03287
KPW 1056.509518
KRW 1722.916439
KWD 0.360547
KYD 0.974464
KZT 591.642214
LAK 25264.31652
LBP 104703.836356
LKR 362.199137
LRD 217.697813
LSL 18.962225
LTL 3.466184
LVL 0.710072
LYD 7.441613
MAD 10.770419
MDL 19.95887
MGA 5395.369343
MKD 61.532875
MMK 2464.918349
MNT 4186.395663
MOP 9.39104
MRU 46.340622
MUR 53.89336
MVR 18.137071
MWK 2027.459902
MXN 20.491391
MYR 4.702009
MZN 75.02354
NAD 18.962225
NGN 1664.810796
NIO 43.023258
NOK 11.552015
NPR 171.292985
NZD 1.987303
OMR 0.451358
PAB 1.173547
PEN 3.938983
PGK 4.998731
PHP 69.37769
PKR 327.14822
PLN 4.205498
PYG 7879.237526
QAR 4.274417
RON 5.094907
RSD 117.407751
RUB 89.003161
RWF 1705.336369
SAR 4.401978
SBD 9.536205
SCR 16.448665
SDG 706.083796
SEK 10.587068
SGD 1.501496
SHP 0.88072
SLE 28.626176
SLL 24615.832932
SOS 667.027514
SRD 44.861271
STD 24297.101044
STN 24.479095
SVC 10.23022
SYP 12982.696651
SZL 18.957729
THB 36.583617
TJS 10.949377
TMT 4.108606
TND 3.372285
TOP 2.826439
TRY 50.893896
TTD 7.937188
TWD 37.074891
TZS 3005.152017
UAH 50.523238
UGX 4101.661482
USD 1.173887
UYU 44.870055
UZS 14245.12448
VES 413.519965
VND 30808.677264
VUV 140.946618
WST 3.24367
XAF 655.394498
XAG 0.011874
XAU 0.000238
XCD 3.172489
XCG 2.107191
XDR 0.8151
XOF 655.394498
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.741058
ZAR 18.929759
ZMK 10566.398179
ZMW 23.354955
ZWL 377.991294
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    84.04

    0%

  • CMSC

    0.0400

    23.65

    +0.17%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1500

    16.82

    -0.89%

  • BCC

    0.5000

    85.51

    +0.58%

  • NGG

    -0.6700

    80.18

    -0.84%

  • GSK

    0.5800

    48.65

    +1.19%

  • BTI

    0.5100

    58.22

    +0.88%

  • BCE

    0.2000

    24.71

    +0.81%

  • AZN

    1.1500

    91.69

    +1.25%

  • RIO

    -1.5400

    87.3

    -1.76%

  • RELX

    -0.4800

    39.84

    -1.2%

  • CMSD

    0.0400

    24.04

    +0.17%

  • VOD

    0.3400

    13.94

    +2.44%

  • JRI

    -0.0500

    13.67

    -0.37%

  • BP

    -0.4900

    35.43

    -1.38%

Swiss glaciers melting away at record rate
Swiss glaciers melting away at record rate / Photo: Fabrice COFFRINI - AFP

Swiss glaciers melting away at record rate

Switzerland's glaciers lost six percent of their total volume this year due to a dry winter and repeated summer heatwaves, shattering previous ice melt records, a report revealed Wednesday.

Text size:

The study by the Cryospheric Commission (CC) of the Swiss Academy of Sciences laid bare the drastic scale of glacial retreat -- which is only set to get worse.

"2022 was a disastrous year for Swiss glaciers: all ice melt records were smashed," the CC said, adding that a two percent loss in 12 months had previously been considered "extreme".

Three cubic kilometres of ice -- three trillion litres of water -- have melted away, the report said.

"It's not possible to slow down the melting in the short term," said glaciology professor Matthias Huss, head of Glacier Monitoring in Switzerland, which documents long-term glacier changes in the Alps and is coordinated by the CC.

If carbon dioxide emissions are reduced and the climate protected, "this might save about one third of the total volumes in Switzerland in the best case", he told AFP.

Otherwise, the country "will be losing almost everything by the end of the century".

- Saharan dust speeds melt -

At the start of the year, the snow cover in the Alps was exceptionally light, then a large volume of sand dust blew in from the Sahara Desert between March and May, settling on the surface.

The contaminated snow absorbed more heat and melted faster, depriving the glaciers of their protective snow coating by early in the European summer.

The continuous heat between May and early September therefore ravaged the glacial ice.

By mid-September, the once-thick layer of ice that covered the pass between the Scex Rouge and Tsanfleuron glaciers had completely melted away, exposing bare rock that had been frozen over since at least the Roman era.

And in early July, the collapse of a section of the Marmolada glacier, the biggest in the Italian Alps, killed 11 people and highlighted how serious the situation had become.

According to an Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report published in February, the melting of ice and snow is one of the 10 key threats from climate change.

- Smallest glaciers hardest hit -

"The loss was particularly dramatic for small glaciers," the CC said.

The Pizol, Vadret dal Corvatsch and Schwarzbachfirn glaciers "have practically disappeared -- measurements were discontinued", the commission said.

In the Engadine and southern Valais regions, both in the south, "a four to six-metre-thick layer of ice at 3,000 metres above sea level vanished," said the report.

Significant losses were recorded even at the very highest measuring points, including the Jungfraujoch mountain, which peaks at nearly 3,500 metres.

"Observations show that many glacier tongues are disintegrating and patches of rock are rising out of the thin ice in the middle of glaciers. These processes are further accelerating the decline," said the report.

"The trend also reveals how important glaciers are to the water and energy supply in hot, dry years," the report stressed -- something to consider given that hydroelectricity provides more than 60 percent of Switzerland's total energy production.

The glacial meltwater in July and August alone would have provided enough water this year to completely fill all the reservoirs in the Swiss Alps.

But Huss said that if the country experienced this year's meteorological conditions in 50 years' time, "the impact would be much stronger, because in 50 years, we expect that almost all glaciers are gone and therefore cannot provide water in a hot and dry summer".

- Melt reveals macabre finds -

The melting of the glaciers has also had some unexpected consequences.

Hikers are regularly making macabre discoveries as bodies are being freed from the ice they have been encased in for decades or even centuries.

The melting can also be a boon for archaeologists who suddenly have access to objects that are thousands of years old.

Meanwhile the melting of a glacier between Italy and Switzerland has moved the border that ran along the watershed, forcing lengthy diplomatic negotiations.

J.Marek--TPP