Alps Glaciers Gone by 2050, Expert Says
John Roach
National Geographic News
January 23, 2007
Glaciers are quickly disappearing from the Alps and will be all but gone by 2050, a climate expert said Monday. That's 50 years earlier than a July 2006 study predicted.
The loss would change the supply of drinking and irrigation water, lead to more falling rocks, and cripple the European ski industry.
On average about 3 percent of Alpine glacial ice is lost each year, said Roland Psenner, a fresh water scientist at the University of Innsbruck in Austria. That corresponds to about 3.3 feet (1 meter) of ice thickness.
Ten percent was lost in the record-breaking heat of 2003. Seven percent was lost in 2006, Psenner said.
"If the melting goes on at this pace, glaciers will be gone by 2030 to 2050—except some high-altitude sites in the French, Swiss, and Italian Alps," he wrote in an email to National Geographic News.
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Thursday, October 11, 2007
National Geographic: Alps Glaciers Gone by 2050, Expert Says
at 11:36 PM Posted by Anil S
Labels: ClimateChange
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