How Western Canada glaciers will melt away

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http://www.cbc.ca/news/technology/how-western-canada-glaciers-will-melt-away-1.3022242

How Western Canada glaciers will melt away
B.C., Alberta glaciers will shrink 70% by 2100
By Emily Chung, CBC News Posted: Apr 06, 2015 11:55 AM ET| Last Updated: Apr 06, 2015 12:28 PM ET

Glaciers in Canada and around the world are already melting rapidly, largely due to human-caused climate change. This photo taken on Aug. 17, 2014 shows a mostly blue-green lake where an icy white Decker Glacier near Whistler, B.C., used to be. (Jason Krupa)

External Links

■Glacier predictions from the study will be archived online here
■Summary of the paper in Nature Geoscience
■CO2 Now: Current CO2 levels in atmosphere

(Note: CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external links.)

Wonder what your favourite glacier to ski or hike will look like in 20 or 40 years? A new study makes detailed predictions about how the glaciers in B.C. and Alberta will melt and shrink between now and 2100.

Glaciers are melting rapidly around the world, including in Canada, and human-caused climate change is now considered to be the main driver.
■Glacier melt worldwide now caused mainly by humans
■Unprecedented B.C. glacier melt seeps into U.S. climate change concerns

Thousands of glaciers in B.C. and Alberta are expected to lose 60 to 80 per cent of their combined volume compared to 2005, depending on how much CO2 gets added to the atmosphere between now and the end of the century.

Many of the glaciers in the Rockies will disappear altogether, predicts the new study published Monday in Nature Geoscience. http://nature.com/articles/doi:10.1038/nature14268

In the Interior and Rockies regions, "ice area and volume losses will exceed 90 per cent," except in the most optimistic climate change scenario considered, it says. Glaciers in coastal northwestern British Columbia are expected to "survive in a diminished state."
■Summary of the paper in Nature Geoscience​

Columbia Icefield
Under an optimistic scenario in which carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere never get above 490 parts per million, the Columbia Icefield in Jasper National Park will melt and break up into many smaller glaciers by 2100. (Garry Clarke/University of British Columbia)

But the most valuable information coming out of the new study is the details, says lead author Garry Clarke, professor emeritus of glaciology at the University of British Columbia.

Previous studies mainly focused on the amount of snow that would replenish the glaciers each year and the net melting over time as the climate warms.

Clarke's study goes into how glaciers will flow and break up, and where their water will go under four climate scenarios considered by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change in its Fifth Assessment Report in 2014.

"It's essentially a resource that people can use if someone wants a glacier ski resort somewhere in the Rockies and they wonder what it might be like 50 years from now," said Clarke.
■Predictions for all glaciers from the study will be archived here http://www.unbc.ca/research/supplementary-data-unbc-publications

Columbia icefield
Under a less optimistic scenario in which carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere hit 1,370 ppm, the Columbia Icefield will have nearly disappeared by 2100. (Garry Clarke/University of British Columbia)

Hydroelectric impact

The details of how the glaciers will melt may also have an impact on hydroelectric production on glacier-fed rivers, as well as agriculture that relies on the water for irrigation, alpine tourism, and resource development, including forestry, the paper says.

Already, Clarke says, he has been working with B.C. Hydro to plan changes to hydroelectric power production in the future. Luckily, in B.C., climate change is expected to increase rainfall, which is expected to largely make up for the loss of the glacier meltwater.

"The main change for them is the timing of water delivery to the reservoirs."
■Decker Glacier lake at Whistler a sign of melt to come

Receding Glaciers 20140525
Tourists walk on the Athabasca Glacier, part of the Columbia Icefield in Jasper National Park, on May 7. The park's manager says the glacier could disappear within one generation. (Canadian Press/Jeff McIntosh)

Other parts of the world may not be so lucky, and similar models may be crucial to help them plan for drier times.

There will be other impacts in Canada as well, including the near-disappearance of the Columbia Icefield, a major tourist attraction in Jasper National Park. It's visited by millions of people each year aboard convoys of special snow coaches. It's also an important source of snow and ice melt for the Athabasca, Saskatchewan and Columbia river basins.

The Columbia Icefield's biggest glacier, the Athabasca, is currently losing more than five metres of ice a year.
■Athabasca Glacier could disappear within generation, says manager

The new model shows that by 2100, under a best-case scenario where the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere peaks at just 490 parts per million (it's currently close to 400 ppm), the icefield will be reduced to multiple small patches. But if CO2 emissions grow to 1,370 ppm, it will have shrunk to almost nothing by 2100.

Clarke hopes the value in the study isn't just directly practical, but will also help people better understand the consequences of climate change and motivate them to take action against a problem he describes as urgent and "dead serious."

"If you look and say, 'Here's a glacier that you ski on right now and here's what it will look like 20, 30, 50 years in the future' and they can see the consequences, I think it's a stronger message. It works a little bit more viscerally for people that are not scientists."

More complicated than imagined

The study took 10 years of work. In collaboration with researchers at the University of Iceland, the University of Victoria, the University of Northern British Columbia, he incorporated the "flow physics" of ice and snow into a computer model of western Canada and its glaciers.

"It was much more complicated than we even imagined," Clarke recalled.

When the starting point for the model was 2,000 years ago, it accurately predicted what the glaciers look like today.

"Then we subject them to the climate of the future and we see what happens to them," Clarke said.

He thinks now that the technique has been worked out, it would be useful to apply it to other parts of the world — something he's interested in helping out with.

But he doesn't personally want to lead another study like this.

"It's a bit depressing to actually be calculating losses the whole time," he said. "I didn't get into science to be that kind of person."

Even if he wanted to, the funding might be hard to come by — as it is, he thinks even the current study "would be pretty hard to put together now." That's because it started a decade ago and was funded by the Canadian Foundation for Climate and Atmospheric Sciences, which was launched under Liberal prime minister Jean Chrétien and not renewed by Stephen Harper's Conservative government when its funds ran out in 2011.

Before

Move left and right over the image.

After

Decker Glacier at Whistler in July 2006 and August 2014.
 

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http://www.the-cryosphere.net/9/65/2015/tc-9-65-2015.pdf

Glacier change in the Cariboo Mountains, British Columbia, Canada (1952–2005)
M. J. Beedle, B. Menounos, and R. Wheate
Geography Program, University of Northern British Columbia, Prince George, BC, Canada
Correspondence to: M. J. Beedle (beedlem@unbc.ca)
Received: 20 May 2014 – Published in The Cryosphere Discuss.: 25 June 2014
Revised: 3 November 2014 – Accepted: 10 November 2014 – Published: 7 January 2015

Abstract. We applied photogrammetric methods with aerial photography from 11 different years between 1946 and 2005 to assess changes in area and volume of 33 glaciers in the Cariboo Mountains of British Columbia for the latter half of the 20th century. These are used to identify changes in extent and elevation primarily for the periods 1952–1985, 1985– 2005, and 1952–2005. All glaciers receded during the period 1952–2005; area retreat averaged 0.19 0.05%a1. From 1952 to 1985, nine glaciers advanced; following 1985, retreat rates accelerated to 0.41 0.12%a1. Thinning rates of a subset of seven glaciers likewise accelerated, from 0.14 0.04mw.e. a1 (1952–1985) to 0.50 0.07mw.e. a1 for the period 1985–2005. Temperatures increased from the earlier to the latter period for the ablation (C0.38 C) and accumulation (C0.87 C) seasons, and average precipitation decreased, particularly in the accumulation season (32 mm, 3.2 %). Our comparison of surface area change with glacier morphometry corroborates previous studies that show primary relations between extent change and surface area. We also find that the strength and sign of these relations varied for different epochs. Our results also indicate that the 1985 glacier extent for the study area reported previously by other studies may be slightly overestimated due to errant mapping of late-lying snow cover.
 
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http://thetyee.ca/News/2015/04/08/F...ce=daily&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=080415

Fossil Fuels Drive Rapid Glacier Loss across Western Canada, Study Finds

Melting offers a 'big signal' about the climate, expert says.

By Andrew Nikiforuk, Today, TheTyee.ca

ColumbiaIcefieldBW_610px.jpg

The Columbia Icefield, which waters both Banff and Jasper national parks, will disappear altogether by 2100 if greenhouse gas emissions aren't controlled. Photo by Miss Barabanov in Your BC: The Tyee's Photo Pool.

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Western Canadian glaciers, an ancient water bank that maintains stream flow for hydroelectric dams and salmon-bearing rivers, could shrink by 70 per cent by 2100.

The catastrophic loss of ice for Western Canada has major implications for the availability of drinkable water, the survival of fresh water fisheries, and the productivity of hydroelectric generation, finds a new study published in Nature Geoscience this week.

Western Canadian glaciers, which occupy 26,700 square kilometres, have been retreating for several decades. The surface area covered by ice in the interior mountains declined 11 per cent between 1985 and 2005, and nearly 20 per cent in the eastern slopes of the Rockies.

"We are getting a big signal from the glaciers about what the climate is doing," said lead author Garry Clarke, professor emeritus at the University of British Columbia.

Using comprehensive modelling, which includes ice flow physics, the study found that rising temperatures caused by fossil fuel emissions will wipe out most glaciers in the interior of British Columbia and the Rocky Mountains of Alberta under most scenarios.

The Columbia Icefield, which waters both Banff and Jasper national parks, will disappear altogether by 2100 if greenhouse gas emissions are allowed to triple beyond current levels under what Clarke called "the bad guy" scenario.

"We won't see ice in the Rocky Mountain Parks. That would be a sad cultural loss and aesthetic loss for Canada," said Clarke.

CIcefieldPredictHiEmissions_610px.jpg

Predicted changes in the Columbia Icefield ice extent under a high emissions scenario (greater than 1,370 ppm). Image by Garry Clarke.

If humans can restrain their fossil fuel spending and keep carbon dioxide emissions below 450 parts per million ("the good guy scenario," as Clarke puts it), and thereby prevent temperatures from rising more than two degrees, many glaciers will have a better chance of keeping their ice -- albeit in a diminished state.

CIcefieldLowEmissions_610px.jpg

Predicted changes in the Columbia Icefield ice extent under a low emissions scenario (peaking at 490 ppm). Image by Garry Clarke.

"There is a reward to be reaped with low carbon constraints," said Clarke. But in order to slow the disappearance of glaciers and sustain others for future generations, society must radically reduce carbon emissions and maintain those reductions for the next 25 years, he said.

Without glaciers, many fresh water fisheries will go extinct. "Glaciers melt in late summer and keep mountain streams flowing and cold. That's one of the services we will lose," explained Clarke.

Retreating glaciers could also have a significant impact on the Columbia River, which "yields the largest hydroelectric production of any river in North America," he said.

Most of the rapid glacial decline will occur between 2020 and 2040, when the majority of glacial melt will run off into streams and rivers into the ocean.

The big uncertainty

In the study's modelling, only glaciers in northwestern B.C. along the Yukon and Alaska border manage to survive as a significant mass of ice by 2100 due to what Clarke calls "their height advantage."

In contrast, glaciers in the B.C. Interior and Rockies "will experience total or near-total losses of ice area and volume."

"The time to act is now if we want to defend glaciers" and their critical contribution to water systems in the Canadian West, added the 73-year-old Clarke who has studied glaciers since the 1960s. "The big uncertainty is how humans will behave."

Federal and provincial governments need to take a cold, hard look at bitumen pipeline proposals, liquefied natural gas projects and shale gas mining, because all of these export-orientated projects are geared to "putting more CO2 into the atmosphere. We have to stop that," he said.

A 2014 ranking of 58 nations on how they have responded to the threat of climate change found that Canada "still shows no intention of moving forward with climate policy and therefore remains the worst performer of all industrialized countries."

Germanwatch and Climate Action Network Europe, which conducted the ranking, found only three countries ranked lower: Iran, Saudi Arabia and Kazakhstan.

Canada is one of the world's 10 largest emitters of carbon dioxide, a club that includes China, the United States, Russia and Japan.

The global oil sector, which dominates motorized transportation, accounts for more than one-third of all reported greenhouse gas emissions.
 
http://www.edmontonjournal.com/opin...Editorial+glaciers+agenda/10952545/story.html

Wednesday’s Editorial: Let’s put glaciers on the agenda
Edmonton Journal April 8, 2015

Wednesday’s Editorial: Let’s put glaciers on the agenda

This current photo depicts the Columbia Icefield and the receding Athabasca Glacier.

Photograph by: Supplied , Calgary Herald

At this time of year, it’s hard to believe that snow and ice are scarce in Western Canada.

A study published this week shows that Alberta and B.C. could lose 70 per cent of their 17,000 remaining glaciers by the end of the century. Researchers at the University of British Columbia and elsewhere used data and computer models to simulate glacial behaviour.

In the face of an enormous challenge, denial is always the easiest course of action. Having shovelled our sidewalks through a long winter, we shrug off global warming as wishful thinking. Facing uncertain labour markets, governments defend inaction as prudence, not irresponsibility.

But receding glaciers are a visual antidote to comfortable illusions. Once hundreds of metres thick, they’re thinning and disappearing even faster than dozens of before-and-after photos reveal.

“It sure shows we’re doing a bad job on climate control,” said Garry Clarke, the UBC glaciologist and lead author of the study.

We are not alone. Glaciers are receding in the Andes, the Alps and the Himalayas. The snows of Kilimanjaro are all but gone. Last month, another Nature Geoscience article showed warm ocean water is eroding the massive Totten Glacier of West Antarctica, an ice sheet measuring 145 kilometres by 35 kilometres. Combined with another destabilization in East Antarctica, it represents a gradual seven-metre increase in sea level. The Northern Hemisphere will be hit extra hard, since Antarctic glaciers are so huge, they have gravitational fields big enough to hold back massive amounts of water.

Far from any coast, Alberta will change, too. Our drier climate means glaciers here will disappear quicker than B.C.’s. Water quality will certainly suffer. Without the cool, clean water of its glaciers, our freshwater streams will suffer and grow warmer, altering the balance of the ecosystems we now enjoy. With the near eradication of the Columbia Icefield — currently losing more than five metres each year — the North Saskatchewan River will depend on precipitation, slowing in hot months.

Though our icefields are melting fast, our action on climate change has been glacial. Time and time again, we’ve believed environment and economy should be like church and state, forgetting that our carbon-intensive oil sector diverts the ice-fed Athabasca River.

That’s why it’s refreshing to see an environmental think-tank — the Pembina Institute — weigh in on the recent provincial budget. Executive director Ed Whittingham lauded aspects of the PC plan: fuel tax, better air quality monitoring and the continuation of investment in carbon capture and storage. Though deeply critical of cuts to Alberta Environment, he sounded a small note of hope that the province is finally trying to build a future on more than just oil.

“I want to recognize the guts it takes to stand up at a politically vulnerable moment and deliver fundamental change,” Whittingham said. “I am more optimistic than I have been in a long time that real action on climate change will follow.”

The writ has been dropped and the electoral circus has officially come to town. Promises are on hold. We no longer have a government.

Our votes May 5 will be settled by many things: government inefficiencies and tax increases, public servants and health care, personalities and campaign mistakes.

But we share Whittingham’s hope for credible action on climate change in Alberta.

A province run with an eye on the glaciers would emphasize economic diversification, strong infrastructure and energy efficiency. What a cool and refreshing change that would be.

Editorials are the consensus opinion of the Journal’s editorial board, comprising Margo Goodhand, Kathy Kerr, Karen Booth, Brent Wittmeier, Julia LeConte and David Evans.

© Copyright (c) The Edmonton Journal
 
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/briti...now-pack-on-southwest-b-c-mountains-1.3026176

Extremely low snow pack on southwest B.C. mountains

South Coast mountains have just 13 per cent of normal snow pack for early April

CBC News Posted: Apr 09, 2015 7:25 AM PT| Last Updated: Apr 09, 2015 7:25 AM PT

A warm winter has left mountains on B.C.'s south coast with just 13 per cent of normal snowpack. (Paul Lopatka/Flickr)

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¡öB.C.'s low snow pack could affect salmon run in summer http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/briti...k-could-affect-salmon-run-in-summer-1.2969992


External Links

¡öRiver Forecast Centre Bulletin for April 1 http://bcrfc.env.gov.bc.ca/bulletins/2015_Apr1.pdf

(Note: CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external links.)

Snow pack is "extremely low" in southwest B.C., with levels on South Coast mountains reaching just 13 per cent of normal for early April, according to new data released yesterday by the River Forecast Centre.

Across B.C., the amount of water stored as snow ¡ª which is important to keep streams flowing through the summer ¡ª is at the second-lowest level recorded in 31 years.

Precipitation was well above average in B.C. in March, reaching double the normal levels in some locations. But with warm weather, most of it fell as rain.

Normally, snow pack reaches its peak in mid-April, but this year it fell between March and April surveys, wrote the River Forecast Centre in its monthly update.

Here are the regions with the five lowest snow packs in the province as of April 1, compared to normal:
¡öSouth Coast ¡ª 13 per cent
¡öVancouver Island ¡ª 15 per cent
¡öLower Fraser ¡ª 26 per cent
¡öSkagit ¡ª 34 per cent
¡öBoundary ¡ª 61 per cent

snow index map
Snowpack is below normal in most parts of the province, meaning the amount of water stored as snow is the second lowest it's been in 31 years. (River Forecast Centre)
 

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http://www.cbc.ca/radio/quirks/quir...7977/canada-s-disappearing-glaciers-1.3028394

Saturday April 11, 2015

Canada's Disappearing Glaciers

Dome Glacier on the Columbia Icefield, Alberta (Anthony Stanley, cc-by-sa-2.0)

Listen 10:19

Download Podcast http://podcast.cbc.ca/mp3/podcasts/quirks_20150411_38095.mp3

A new study has determined that most of the glaciers in British Columbia and Alberta will disappear completely by the end of the 21st century, under current climate warming conditions.

Dr. Garry Clarke, Professor Emeritus in the Department of Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences at the University of British Columbia, found that 70 percent of glaciers overall will melt, but 90 percent of glaciers in the Rocky Mountains will be gone by 2100. One of the biggest impacts of the thinning glaciers will be on freshwater ecosystems.

During the summer months, glacial melt provides cool water to many headwaters. Warmer streams will have a negative impact on freshwater fish. However, glaciers in BC's north-west Coastal Mountains will survive because of the higher topography.

Related Links

- Paper in Nature Geoscience http://www.nature.com/ngeo/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/ngeo2407.html
- UBC release http://news.ubc.ca/2015/04/06/western-canada-to-lose-70-per-cent-of-glaciers-by-2100/
- CBC News story http://www.cbc.ca/news/technology/how-western-canada-glaciers-will-melt-away-1.3022242
- New Scientist story http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn27296-western-canadas-glaciers-may-all-but-vanish-by-2100.html
 
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