
Posted Mon, 02/13/2012 - 20:31 by admin
Meltwater from Asia's peaks is much less than previously estimated, but lead
scientist says the loss of ice caps and glaciers around the world remains a
serious concern
Damian Carrington
guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 8 February 2012 18.10 GMT
Hopar glacier in Pakistan. Melting ice outside the two largest caps - Greenland
and Antarctica - is much less than previously estimated, the study has found.
Photograph: Paula Bronstein/Getty Images
The world's greatest snow-capped peaks, which run in a chain from the Himalayas
to Tian Shan on the border of China and Kyrgyzstan, have lost no ice over the
last decade, new research shows.
The discovery has stunned scientists, who had believed that around 50bn tonnes
of meltwater were being shed each year and not being replaced by new snowfall.
The study is the first to survey all the world's icecaps and glaciers and was
made possible by the use of satellite data. Overall, the contribution of melting
ice outside the two largest caps – Greenland and Antarctica – is much less than
previously estimated, with the lack of ice loss in the Himalayas and the other
high peaks of Asia responsible for most of the discrepancy.
Bristol University glaciologist Prof Jonathan Bamber, who was not part of the
research team, said: "The very unexpected result was the negligible mass loss
from high mountain Asia, which is not significantly different from zero."
The melting of Himalayan glaciers caused controversy in 2009 when a report from
the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change mistakenly stated that they
woulddisappear by 2035, instead of 2350. However, the scientist who led the new
work is clear that while greater uncertainty has been discovered in Asia's
highest mountains, the melting of ice caps and glaciers around the world remains
a serious concern.
"Our results and those of everyone else show we are losing a huge amount of
water into the oceans every year," said Prof John Wahr of the University of
Colorado. "People should be just as worried about the melting of the world's ice
as they were before."
His team's study, published in the journal Nature, concludes that between
443-629bn tonnes of meltwater overall are added to the world's oceans each year.
This is raising sea level by about 1.5mm a year, the team reports, in addition
to the 2mm a year caused byexpansion of the warming ocean.
The scientists are careful to point out that lower-altitude glaciers in the
Asian mountain ranges – sometimes dubbed the "third pole" – are definitely
melting. Satellite images and reports confirm this. But over the study period
from 2003-10 enough ice was added to the peaks to compensate.
The impact on predictions for future sea level rise is yet to be fully studied
but Bamber said: "The projections for sea level rise by 2100 will not change by
much, say 5cm or so, so we are talking about a very small modification."
Existing estimates range from 30cm to 1m.
Wahr warned that while crucial to a better understanding of ice melting, the
eight years of data is a relatively short time period and that variable monsoons
mean year-to-year changes in ice mass of hundreds of billions of tonnes. "It is
awfully dangerous to take an eight-year record and predict even the next eight
years, let alone the next century," he said.
The reason for the radical reappraisal of ice melting in Asia is the different
ways in which the current and previous studies were conducted. Until now,
estimates of meltwater loss for all the world's 200,000 glaciers were based on
extrapolations of data from a few hundred monitored on the ground. Those
glaciers at lower altitudes are much easier for scientists to get to and so were
more frequently included, but they were also more prone to melting.
The bias was particularly strong in Asia, said Wahr: "There extrapolation is
really tough as only a handful of lower-altitude glaciers are monitored and
there are thousands there very high up."
The new study used a pair of satellites, called Grace, which measure tiny
changes in the Earth's gravitational pull. When ice is lost, the gravitational
pull weakens and is detected by the orbiting spacecraft. "They fly at 500km, so
they see everything," said Wahr, including the hard-to-reach, high-altitude
glaciers.
"I believe this data is the most reliable estimate of global glacier mass
balance that has been produced to date," said Bamber. He noted that 1.4 billion
people depend on the rivers that flow from the Himalayas and Tibetan plateau:
"That is a compelling reason to try to understand what is happening there
better."
He added: "The new data does not mean that concerns about climate change are
overblown in any way. It means there is a much larger uncertainty in high
mountain Asia than we thought. Taken globally all the observations of the
Earth's ice – permafrost, Arctic sea ice, snow cover and glaciers – are going in
the same direction."
Grace launched in 2002 and continues to monitor the planet, but it has passed
its expected mission span and its batteries are beginning to weaken. A
replacement mission has been approved by the US and German space agencies and
could launch in 2016.
• This article was amended on 9 February 2012. The original sub-heading read
"Melting ice from Asia's peaks is much less then previously estimated" as did
the photo caption and text: "Melting ice outside the two largest caps -
Greenland and Antarctica - is much less then previously estimated". These have
all been corrected.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2012/feb/08/glaciers-mountains
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