Ice Melt Accelerating, Causing Depletion of Freshwater Resources

Small Glacier Norwegian Archipelago Svalbard

A small glacier in the Arctic region of Norwegian archipelago Svalbard, as photographed by NASA’s Airborne Tropical Tropopause Experiment (ATTREX). This is one of the seven regions where ice loss is accelerating, causing the depletion of freshwater resources. Credit: NASA/John Sonntag

Continuous monitoring of glaciers and ice caps has provided unprecedented insights to global ice loss that could have serious socioeconomic impacts on some regions.

Seven of the regions that dominate global ice mass losses are melting at an accelerated rate, a new study shows, and the quickened melt rate is depleting freshwater resources that millions of people depend on.

The impact of melting ice in Greenland and Antarctica on the world’s oceans is well documented. But the largest contributors to sea level rise in the 20th century were melting ice caps and glaciers located in seven other regions: Alaska, the Canadian Arctic Archipelago, the Southern Andes, High Mountain Asia, the Russian Arctic, Iceland and the Norwegian archipelago Svalbard. The five Arctic regions accounted for the greatest share of ice loss.

And this ice melt is accelerating, potentially affecting not just coastlines but agriculture and drinking water supplies in communities around the world, according to the study by scientists at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory; the University of California, Irvine; and the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado. The study was led by Enrico Ciraci, a UCI graduate student researcher in Earth system science.

“In the Andes Mountains in South America and in High Mountain Asia, glacier melt is a major source of drinking water and irrigation for several hundred million people,” said study coauthor Isabella Velicogna, a senior scientist at JPL and professor of Earth system science at UCI. “Stress on this resource could have far-reaching effects on economic activity and political stability.”

The researchers based their work on data from the recently decommissioned U.S.-German Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) pair of satellites that operated from 2002 to 2017, and their successor pair, GRACE Follow On (launched in 2018). The researchers calculated that, on average, these seven regions lost more than 280 billion tons of ice per year.

This ice loss contributed a total of 13 millimeters (0.5 inches) in global sea level rise between 2002 and 2019, and the rate has increased from 0.7 millimeters (0.028 inches) per year in 2002 to 0.9 millimeters (0.035 inches) per year in 2019.

As with GRACE, the GRACE-FO satellites continuously measure very slight changes in Earth’s gravitational pull as they orbit the Earth. Over time, shifts in the distribution of water are the largest source of gravity changes on the planet, so scientists can use the measurements of gravity change to track variations in the mass of water as it cycles from the ice caps and glaciers to the oceans.

GRACE was a joint mission of NASA and the German Aerospace Center, in partnership with the University of Texas at Austin. GRACE-FO is a partnership between NASA and the German Research Centre for Geosciences. When it launched in May 2018, 11 months had passed since GRACE made its last measurements.

Velicogna and her coauthors closed the resulting data gap between the end of GRACE and the initiation of GRACE-FO by using a state-of-the-art modeling tool called Modern-Era Retrospective Analysis for Research and Applications, Version 2 (MERRA-2) from NASA’s Global Modeling and Assimilation Office. MERRA-2 utilizes a host of independent observational datasets to boost the precision of its estimates. For this study, the researchers noted how well the MERRA-2 results lined up with the GRACE and GRACE-FO data, giving them a high degree of confidence of what these satellites would have observed if one or both were operating in the period of the data gap.

Having a record based on the long-term, precision measurements of hundreds of thousands of the world’s glaciers for over 18 years, Velicogna said, significantly enhances our understanding of their evolution.

“This paper demonstrates that GRACE-FO, in addition to GRACE, is providing precise, reliable, worldwide observations of the fate of mountain glaciers, which are not only important for understanding sea level change, but also for managing our freshwater resources,” she said.

The study, titled “Continuity of the Mass Loss of the World’s Glaciers and Ice Caps From the GRACE and GRACE Follow-On Missions,” was published April 30 in Geophysical Research Letters.

JPL managed the GRACE mission and manages the GRACE-FO mission for NASA’s Earth Science Division in the Science Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters in Washington. The California Institute of Technology (Caltech) in Pasadena, California, manages JPL for NASA.

2 Comments on "Ice Melt Accelerating, Causing Depletion of Freshwater Resources"

  1. Clyde Spencer | June 7, 2020 at 9:14 am | Reply

    The people mentioned, who are threatened by loss of water, are living off ‘fossil’ ice left over from the last glaciation. Were warming to be halted, (assuming that it is within our power) and the ice quit melting, they would still be threatened by a lack of water. The Earth is a dynamic system and nobody should expect that things will not change. An analogy is living on the flanks of an active volcano. The soil is typically fertile and agriculture does well. However, when (notice I didn’t say “if”) the volcano erupts, it will wipe out the homes and fields of those living there. Humans have to be able to adapt to changing conditions. The only thing that is constant is change.

  2. “Ice Melt Accelerating, Causing Depletion of Freshwater Resources”
    Melting ice in the arctic never had any effect on the amount of fresh water availabe. Arctic ice melts into the sea which is salt. That melting ice never flows anywhere it can used for man. The oceans are in a continual cycle of evaporation that forms clouds that produce rain. In its many forms fresh water is no less or no more than it was a million years ago. For example some areas of the world experience drought while other areas floods. In generations past tribal communities just picked up and left one area and went to one better suited for their people. Today that is not the case tribal communities can not just move about freely as they did before. Factions and governments prevent that from happening using violence on these once nomadic peoples. You’re barking up the wrong tree if you want to help people.

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