Wikimedia Commons

Glacier in Canada's far north

By Alex Kirby
Climate News Network 

Canada’s Arctic Archipelago glaciers will melt faster than ever in the next few centuries, research by European-funded scientists has shown.

They say 20 percent of the Canadian Arctic glaciers may have disappeared by the end of this century, which would mean an extra sea level rise of 3.5 centimeters [1.38 inches].

The results of the research, part of the EU-funded ice2sea program, were published in Geophysical Research Letters last week, and the paper, “Irreversible mass loss of Canadian Arctic Archipelago glaciers,” is available online.

The researchers developed a climate model for the island group in the north of Canada in which they simulated the shrinking and growing of glaciers in this area.

The model correctly “predicted” the ice mass loss measured over the last ten years, and the researchers then used it to look forward to project the effect of future climate change on the Arctic Archipelago glaciers.

The most important result of the research is that it shows that the melting will probably be irreversible, according to lead author Jan Lenaerts of Utrecht University.

He says: “Even if we assume that global warming is not happening quite so fast, it is still highly likely that the ice is going to melt at an alarming rate. The chances of it growing back are very slim.”

One main reason for this expected irreversibility is that snow melting on tundra, and sea ice loss from around the glaciers, will intensify regional warming.

Snow and sea ice reflect the sunlight, and when they disappear a large part of the sunlight will instead be absorbed by the land and the sea, raising the local temperature significantly.

Successful backcasting

In one scenario considered by the scientists 20 percent of the volume of the glaciers disappears by the end of this century. This would be accompanied by an average global temperature rise of 3 degrees C [5.4 degrees F].

But the regional rise around the Canadian ice caps – a form of glacier in which the ice flows to the sea in many directions – would be 8 degrees C [14.4 degrees F]. And this is not an extreme scenario, Lenaerts says.

Canada’s Arctic Archipelago glaciers are one of the largest ice bodies in the world after Greenland and the Antarctic. If they  melted completely, global average sea level would rise by 20 centimeters [7.87 inches]. Since the year 2000 the temperature in this area has risen by 1 to 2 degrees C [1.8 to 3.6 degrees F] and the ice volume has already decreased significantly.

Professor David Vaughan, the program leader of ice2sea, who is based at the British Antarctic Survey in Cambridge, U.K., says: “Added to glaciers in Alaska, the Russian Arctic and Patagonia, these apparently small contributions add up to significant sea-level rise.

“A key success of this study was in showing that the model performed well in reproducing recently observed changes. That success gives us confidence in how the model predicts future changes”.

Glaciers in many parts of the world are undergoing rapid melting, although some experts argue that natural variability needs to be taken into account as well as climate change.

+++++

The U.K.-based Climate News Network is run by four volunteers, all veteran journalists who have covered climate change for many years for leading British newspapers and broadcasters and are now freelancing.