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August 29, 2000-7
Copyright © 2001 Earth Policy Institute
Climate Change Has World Skating On Thin
Ice
Lester R. Brown
If any explorers had been hiking to the North
Pole this summer, they would have had to swim the last few miles.
The discovery of open water at the Pole by an ice-breaker cruise
ship in mid August surprised many in the scientific community.
This finding, combined with two recent studies,
provides not only more evidence that the Earths ice cover
is melting, but that it is melting at an accelerating rate. A study
by two Norwegian scientists projects that within 50 years, the Arctic
Ocean could be ice-free during the summer. The other, a study by
a team of four U.S. scientists, reports that the vast Greenland
ice sheet is melting.
The projection that the Arctic Ocean will lose
all its summer ice is not surprising, since an earlier study reported
that the thickness of the ice sheet has been reduced by 42 percent
over the last four decades. The area of the ice sheet has also shrunk
by 6 percent. Together this thinning and shrinkage have reduced
the Arctic Ocean ice mass by nearly half.
Meanwhile, Greenland is gaining some ice in the
higher altitudes, but it is losing much more at lower elevations,
particularly along its southern and eastern coasts. The huge island
of 2.2 million square kilometers (three times the size of Texas)
is experiencing a net loss of some 51 billion cubic meters of water
each year, an amount equal to the annual flow of the Nile River.
The Antarctic is also losing ice. In contrast to
the North Pole, which is covered by the Arctic Sea, the South Pole
is covered by the Antarctic continent, a land mass roughly the size
of the United States. Its continent-sized ice sheet, which is on
average 2.3 kilometers (1.5 miles) thick, is relatively stable.
But the ice shelves, the portions of the ice sheet that extend into
the surrounding seas, are fast disappearing.
A team of U.S. and British scientists reported
in 1999 that the ice shelves on either side of the Antarctic Peninsula
are in full retreat. From roughly mid-century through 1997, these
areas lost 7,000 square kilometers as the ice sheet disintegrated.
But then within scarcely a year they lost another 3,000 square kilometers.
Delaware-sized icebergs that have broken off are threatening ships
in the area. The scientists attribute the accelerated ice melting
to a regional temperature rise of some 2.5 degrees Celsius (4.5
degrees Fahrenheit) since 1940.
These are not the only examples of melting. My
colleague, Lisa Mastny, who has reviewed some 30 studies on this
topic, reports that ice is melting almost everywhere and
at an accelerating rate.
(See Worldwatch
News Brief,
March 6, 2000.) The snow/ice mass is shrinking in the worlds
major mountain ranges: the Rocky Mountains, the Andes, the Alps,
and the Himalayas. In Glacier National Park in Montana, the number
of glaciers has dwindled from 150 in 1850 to fewer than 50 today.
The U.S. Geological Survey projects that the remaining glaciers
will disappear within 30 years.
Scientists studying the Quelccaya glacier in the
Peruvian Andes report that its retreat has accelerated from 3 meters
a year between roughly 1970 and 1990 to 30 meters a year since 1990.
In Europes Alps, the shrinkage of the glacial area by 3540
percent since 1850 is expected to continue. These ancient glaciers
could largely disappear over the next half-century.
Shrinkage of ice masses in the Himalayas has accelerated
alarmingly. In eastern India, the Dokriani Bamak glacier, which
retreated by 16 meters between 1992 and 1997, drew back by a further
20 meters in 1998 alone.
This melting and shrinkage of snow/ice masses should
not come as a total surprise. Swedish scientist Svante Arrhenius
warned at the beginning of the last century that burning fossil
fuels could raise atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide (CO2),
creating a greenhouse effect. Atmospheric CO2
levels, estimated at 280 parts per million (ppm) before the Industrial
Revolution, have climbed from 317 ppm in 1960 to 368 ppm in 1999
a gain of 16 percent in only four decades.
As CO2 concentrations have
risen, so too has Earths temperature. Between 1975 and 1999,
the average temperature increased from 13.94 degrees Celsius to
14.35 degrees, a gain of 0.41 degrees or 0.74 degrees Fahrenheit
in 24 years. The warmest 23 years since recordkeeping began in 1866
have all occurred since 1975.
Researchers are discovering that a modest rise
in temperature of only 1 or 2 degrees Celsius in mountainous regions
can dramatically increase the share of precipitation falling as
rain while decreasing the share coming down as snow. The result
is more flooding during the rainy season, a shrinking snow/ice mass,
and less snowmelt to feed rivers during the dry season.
These reservoirs in the sky, where
nature stores fresh water for use in the summer as the snow melts,
are shrinking and some could disappear entirely. This will affect
the water supply for cities and for irrigation in areas dependent
on snowmelt to feed rivers.
If the massive snow/ice mass in the Himalayas
which is the third largest in the world, after the Greenlandic and
Antarctic ice sheets continues to melt, it will affect the
water supply of much of Asia. All of the regions major rivers
the Indus, Ganges, Mekong, Yangtze, and Yellow originate
in the Himalayas. The melting in the Himalayas could alter the hydrology
of several Asian countries, including Pakistan, India, Bangladesh,
Thailand, Viet Nam, and China. Less snowmelt in the summer dry season
to feed rivers could exacerbate the hydrological poverty already
affecting so many in the region. (See Issue Alerts 1 and 4.)
As the ice on land melts and flows to the sea,
sea level rises. Over the last century, sea level rose by 2030
centimeters (812 inches). During this century, the existing
climate models indicate it could rise by as much as 1 meter. If
the Greenland ice sheet, which is up to 3.2 kilometers thick in
places, were to melt entirely, sea level would rise by 7 meters
(23 feet).
Even a much more modest rise would affect the low-lying
river floodplains of Asia, where much of the regions rice
is produced. According to a World Bank analysis, a 1-meter rise
in sea level would cost low-lying Bangladesh half its riceland.
Numerous low-lying island countries would have to be evacuated.
The residents of densely populated river valleys of Asia would be
forced inland into already crowded interiors. Rising sea level could
create climate refugees by the million in countries such as China,
India, Bangladesh, Indonesia, Viet Nam, and the Philippines.
Even more disturbing, ice melting itself can accelerate
temperature rise. As snow/ice masses shrink, less sunlight is reflected
back into space. With more sunlight absorbed by less reflective
surfaces, temperature rises even faster and melting accelerates.
We dont have to sit idly by as this scenario
unfolds. There may still be time to stabilize atmospheric CO2
levels before continuing carbon emissions cause climate change to
spiral out of control. We have more than enough wind, solar, and
geothermal energy that can be economically harnessed to power the
world economy. If we were to incorporate the cost of climate disruption
in the price of fossil fuels in the form of a carbon tax, investment
would quickly shift from fossil fuels to these climate-benign energy
sources.
The leading automobile companies are all working
on fuel cell engines. Daimler Chrysler plans to start marketing
such an automobile in 2003. The fuel of choice for these engines
is hydrogen. Even leaders within the oil industry recognize that
we will eventually shift from a carbon-based energy economy to a
hydrogen-based one. The question is whether we can make that shift
before Earths climate system is irrevocably altered.
See
all data and graphs (51k, approx. 13 sec at 33.6 speed)
Copyright
© 2000 Earth Policy Institute
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FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
From Worldwatch Institute
Seth Dunn, Fossil Fuel Use in Flux,
Carbon Emissions Fall Again, and Global Temperature
Drops in Lester R. Brown, et al., Vital Signs 2000: The
Environmental Trends that are Shaping Our Future (New York:
W.W. Norton & Co., 2000).
Lisa Mastny, Melting of Earths Ice Cover Reaches New
High, Worldwatch News Brief, 6 March 2000. http://www.worldwatch.org/
alerts/000306.html
Lisa Mastny, Ice Cover Melting Worldwide, in Lester
R. Brown, et al., Vital Signs 2000: The Environmental Trends
that are Shaping Our Future (W.W. Norton & Co., NY: 2000).
From Other Sources
Dorthe Dahl-Jensen, The Greenland Ice Sheet
Reacts, Science, 21 July 2000.
W. Krabill et al., Greenland Ice Sheet: High-Elevation Balance
and Peripheral Thinning, Science, 21 July 2000.
Lars H. Smedsrud and Tore Furevik, Towards an Ice-Free Arctic?
Cicerone 2/2000 http://www.cicero.uio.no/cicerone/
00/2/en/smedsrud.pdf
Charles J. Vorosmarty et al., Global Water Resources: Vulnerability
from Climate Change and Population Growth, Science,
14 July 2000.
World Bank, Entering the 21st Century: World Development Report
1999/2000, p. 100.

LINKS
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
http://www.ipcc.ch
National Snow and Ice Data Center
http://www-nsidc.colorado.edu
The New York Times Climate Index
http://www.nytimes.com/library/
national/science/climate-index.html
World Glacier Monitoring Service
http://www.geo.unizh.ch/wgms



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