 Marc Olefs and Andrea
Fischer, from left, researchers from Innsbruck University, check a field
covered with white polyethylene against the backdrop of jagged peaks, at
Eisgrat (Ice Spine) skiing station on Stubai glacier near the village of
Neustift-im-Stubaital, in this July 4, 2005 file photo.
[AP]
 |
Vienna - Glaciers will all but disappear from the Alps by 2050, scientists
warned Monday, basing their bleak outlook on mounting evidence of slow but
steady melting of the continental ice sheets.
In western Austria's Alpine province of Tyrol, glaciers have been shrinking
by about 3 percent a year, said Roland Psenner of the University of Innsbruck's
Institute for Ecology.
And 2050 is a conservative estimate, he said: If they keep melting at that
rate, most glaciers could vanish by 2037.
"The future looks rather liquid," he said.
Experts at a regional conference on the Alps, held annually in the mountain
resort of Alpbach, stopped short of blaming global warming. But they called for
a review of preventive measures to protect people living in valleys at risk of
dangerous flooding.
Runoff from melting glaciers caused severe flooding that devastated parts of
Switzerland in the summer of 2005.
Glacial melting is a global problem, according to the Zurich-based World
Glacier Monitoring Service, which keeps tabs on 30 ice sheets in nine mountain
ranges worldwide and says their average mass is steadily eroding.
Glaciers are the planet's largest source of fresh water after polar ice,
which scientists say also is melting to 100-year lows. In Europe, they're also
hugely popular with skiers and snowboarders seeking year-round thrills and help
anchor a multimillion-dollar tourist industry.
In 2005, glacier thickness decreased by an average of 23 1/2 inches, and in
2004 by an average of 27 1/2 inches, the Swiss agency said, citing preliminary
measurements. Since 1980, it said, Europe's glaciers have lost about 31 1/2 feet
of ice. About 7 feet melted away in a single summer, 2003, when a heat wave
zapped much of Europe, said Michael Zemp, a glacier expert at the University of
Zurich.
"What's important for a glacier is winter snow accumulation and a cold summer
with not a lot of melting," Zemp said Monday in a telephone interview. "A bad
year for a glacier is a dry winter and a hot summer, and these are the
conditions we've been seeing."
"Glaciers have been in a general retreat worldwide since the end of the last
Ice Age," he said.
Forecasting their demise is problematic "because we don't know what scenarios
there will be, and there are a range of scenarios. This isn't a weather
forecast. But we are seeing an accelerated glacial melting."
In the 13 years spanning 1991-2004, twice as much glacial ice melted away in
Europe than in the 30 preceding years from 1961-1990, climatologists say.
To be sure, a few glaciers have more staying power: Switzerland's Great
Aletsch Glacier is still more than a half-mile thick and seems destined to
survive well into the 22nd century.
But data collected by aircraft and satellites since 2002 has shown that many
of Earth's estimated 160,000 glaciers from the Rocky Mountains to the Himalayas
have been shrinking.
Scientists say the phenomenon has been occurring for more than a century,
suggesting that manmade emissions of carbon dioxide are combining with purely
natural factors, such as a shift in jet streams pumping warmer air into
traditionally cooler northern climes.
Even in Austria, a relatively sparsely populated country of 8.2 million
people, passenger cars alone chug 11.4 million tons of carbon dioxide into the
atmosphere each year, the nation's leading automobile club said Monday.
It urged commuters to consider walking or cycling to work, and called on
motorists to ease back, saying a recent study showed that 10 percent of drives
covers less than a half-mile, a distance easily traveled on foot or with a bike.
Europeans, meanwhile, have fretted and sweated their way through an unusually
balmy winter that has shattered temperature records and forced World Cup ski
organizers to cancel competitions for lack of snow.
"Winter has been in a holding pattern," said Gerhard Baumgartner, a
meteorologist with Austria's national weather service.