In 20 Years, Greenland Ice Sheet Loses Enough Water To Submerge US

Greenland’s immense ice sheet has lost enough ice in the past 20 years to submerge the entire United States in half a metre of water, according to data released this week by Danish researchers.

The climate is warming faster in the Arctic than anywhere else on the planet and melting ice from Greenland is now the main factor in the rise in the Earth’s oceans, according to NASA.

Since measurements began in 2002, the Greenland ice sheet has lost about 4,700 billion tonnes of ice, said Polar Portal, a joint project involving several Danish Arctic research institutes.

This represents 4,700 cubic kilometres of melted water — “enough to cover the entire US by half a meter” — and has contributed 1.2 centimetres to sea level rise, the Arctic monitoring website added.

Polar Portal’s findings are based on satellite imagery from the US-German GRACE programme (Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment), which showed the ice melt to be most severe near the coasts of the Arctic territory, at the edge of the ice sheet.

In these peripheral zones, “independent observations also indicate that the ice is thinning, that the glacier fronts are retreating in fjords and on land, and that there is a greater degree of melting from the surface of the ice,” the website said.

The west coast of Greenland is particularly affected, according to the data.

Climate change is particularly alarming in the Arctic, which scientists say is warming at a rate three to four times the global average.

According to a study published by NASA in late January, the accelerated melting near Greenland’s coasts can be explained by the warming of the Arctic Ocean.

The phenomenon “is melting Greenland’s glaciers at least as much as warm air is melting them from above”.

Melting ice from Greenland is currently the main factor in the rise in the Earth’s oceans and the territory’s glaciers are now retreating six to seven times faster than they were 25 years ago, the US agency added.

According to climate scientists, the Greenland ice sheet contains enough water to raise the oceans by more than seven metres, and the ice sheet in Antarctica contains enough for a rise of almost 50 metres.

Arctic sea ice cover, although its melting has no effect on sea levels, has also shrunk considerably, losing almost 13 percent of its average surface area every 10 years. (AFP)

Recent Posts

  • Featured

Van Panchayats: Working For Forest Rights In U’khand’s Hillside Communities

In December, Uttarakhand’s High Court criticised the state government over dereliction of duty, including for being “in a deep slumber”…

2 days ago
  • Featured

Wars Cause Major Pollution And Environmental Damage

As wars grind on in Ukraine and Gaza, another location ravaged by conflict is taking steps to implement a historic…

2 days ago
  • Featured

Asia’s Extreme April Heat Worsened By Climate Change, Says Study

According to rapid attribution analysis by an international team of leading climate scientists from the World Weather Attribution group, extreme…

2 days ago
  • Featured

How Big Money Finances Indian Politics

The business elite funds political parties and elections in return for economic favours or for securing favourable policies for their…

2 days ago
  • Featured

“Don’t Play With Self-Respect & Dignity Of The Women Of Bengal”

On Monday, May 13, West Bengal chief minister Mamata Banerjee asked Prime Minister Narendra Modi not to play with the…

3 days ago
  • Featured

Gaza’s Invisible Massacre: Aid Workers Killed In Record Numbers

The vast majority of humanitarians killed are national staff, but as in most conflicts, little is heard about them. On…

3 days ago

This website uses cookies.