Climate scientists warned: The end of this century could end many glaciers

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Climate scientists warned: The end of this century could end many glaciers

Glacier and frozen water sheets are the source of 70 percent of the world’s freshwater. These include a large part of the Greenland and Antarctica glacier. Since glaciers are usually the same size in the stable climate, any change in any of them is an important symptom of climate change.

Sugan Mishra, an officer in the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) science, says that the glaciers are melting at an unprecedented pace due to temperature and temperature rise from human-related climate change.

The livelihood of billions of people in danger

Last year, the Norwegian Islands in Scandinavia, Swallbird and North Asia glaciers recorded the largest damage to the total mass in one year.

According to the UN partner of the University of Zurich, according to the World Hemods of Monitoring Service (WMS), every year, the glaciers determine the position of the glaciers, measuring the falling and melting ice in the glaciers every year.

Sulakana Mishra said that more than 12 million farmers are at risk of the 5 -mile -long -Hindu mountain range in the West Himalayas, which spread from Afghanistan to Pakistan.

He said that this mountain carriers are called “third pole” because of the extraordinary water organization.

Damage ‘irreversible’

Despite being such a huge water store, it is probably too late to save them for future generations.

According to the WMO, a large part of the year -long snow is melting fast. In the last six years, in five years, records have been recorded quickly.

The loss of freezing water between 2022 and 2024 has been the highest damage to three years.

“We are watching unprecedented changes in the glaciers,” which in many cases can be difficult to reverse, “Sulakana Mishra said.

Melts in the ice like Germany

The WBMS assumes that glaciers have lost more than 9,000 billion tonnes of mass since 1975. And this data does not include Greenland and Antarctica’s frozen water sheets.

“This loss can be considered almost equal to a large part of the water in Germany -Aer, which is about 25 meters density,” said Michael Jamp, director of WLMS.

Explaining the search for a new international research on Glassie Mass Change, he said that an average of 20 billion tonnes of frosty water has been lost in the world since 20 years.

“This means that 20 billion tonnes of ice sheets are melting Puri (world) population every year,” Michael Jamp said. In central Europe, about 40 percent of the remaining frozen water sheets have melted. If it continues at the current rate, “Alps glaciers will end in this century.”

Repeating these concerns WMO’s Sulakna Mishra said that if the greenhouse gas emissions were not slow “and the temperature continued to rise at the current rate, at the end of 2100, we would lose 80 percent of the small glaciers in Europe, East Africa, Indonesia and elsewhere in Europe, East Africa, Indonesia and elsewhere.”

Flood

The glacier has an instant and greater effect on the melting economy, ecosystem and community, the latest data clearly shows that the sea level, the glacier grows 25 to 30 percent increase.

Due to the melted snow, the sea level increases by about one millimeter every year. This image may seem modest, but every one millimeter increases can cause floods for 2 to 3 million people per year.

The glacier Michael Jump said, “The number is small, but its effect is big.”

Each person will be damaged

WMO’s Sulakna Mishra says floods can earn people’s livelihoods and they may be forced to move from one place to another. He said, “If you ask me how many people will really affect it, I would say here that it will affect every person.”

From a multilateral point of view, “This time is to spread awareness, change policies and … by collecting all resources, we have outlines and research to we have great principles, which can help these new changes to mites and exterminate.”

Day to consider the world’s glacier conservation

The purpose of the World Hima Himas celebrated on March 28 is to increase the awareness of the important role of ice and frosty water giant rivers in the climate system. One day later, World Water Day was celebrated.

One of the main attractions of ‘International Glade Conservation Year 2025’ will be, the ‘International Heads of Conference Conference’ held in May, where scientists, policy and community leaders will gather at the UN headquarters in New York to discuss the solution to the crisis. At this conference, the importance of the glaciers will be highlighted and efforts will be made to encourage the observation of the melting and melting crossphoric processes.

Glaciology at Zurich University was preparing himself for a glacier world from WWMS’s Michael Zamp from now on, “If I think about my kids, he will probably live in such a world. It would be a very worrying situation.”

“I would advise you to go there with your kids and take stock of it. Because it will be able to see the serious changes itself and you will understand that we’re putting a big burden on our next generation.”

Scientists are collecting data on southern cascade glaciers in the state of Washington in the United States.

The best glacier of the year

This year, southern Casked Ghirad, located in the state of Washington in the United States, has been declared as the best glacier of 2021. This part of the frozen water has been constantly monitored since the 12th. It has achieved the longest record of long -term balance of glacological masses in the West Hemisphere.

“The southern cascade glaciers, the beauty of the glacier and the dedicated scientists and volunteers, who have collected directly at the ground level to measure the climb for more than six decades,” said Ketlin Florentine of the US Geological Survey.