Advances in satellite technology have revealed that the world's glaciers contain significantly less ice than previously thought, according to a study published in Nature Geoscience on Monday, Gloria Dickie reported for Reuters.
Photo Insert: High-resolution satellites deployed in recent years have allowed for the first analysis of how 98% of the world's glaciers are moving.
The revised estimate reduces global sea level rise by 3 inches if all glaciers were to melt. But it raises concern for some communities that rely on seasonal melt from glaciers to feed rivers and irrigate crops. If glaciers contain less ice, water will run out sooner than expected.
While some ice naturally melts throughout the year, rising temperatures due to climate change are speeding up glacier retreat. Between 2000 and 2019, these rivers of ice lost roughly 5.4 trillion tons.
Countries are already struggling with disappearing glaciers. Peru is investing in desalination to make up for declining freshwater. And Chile hopes to create artificial glaciers in its mountains. But, "we've had quite a poor understanding of how much ice is actually stored in glaciers," said lead study author Romain Millan, a glaciologist at Université Grenoble Alpes.
Past analyses, for example, double-counted glaciers along the peripheries of the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets, overestimating ice volume. Millan and his colleagues also found that Asia's Himalayas contain 37% more ice than previously estimated, while South America’s Andean glaciers contain roughly 27% less ice.
Already, Peru's glaciers have lost 40 percent of their surface area since the 1970s.
The Nature Geoscience study assessed how quickly glaciers were moving across the landscape, or their velocity. Such measurements allow scientists to more accurately measure volume, as the way glaciers flow indicates where ice is thick or thin.
But collecting this information has been limited by technology. High-resolution satellites deployed in recent years, however, allowed for the first analysis of how 98% of the world's glaciers are moving, "from small glaciers in the Andes up to massive glaciers in Svalbard and Patagonia," said Millan.
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