Glacier melt threatens lives and livelihoods: 2C warming is too high

by Dr. Irene Quaile-Kersken
06/09/2025

The shocking images of a glacier breaking off and covering a village in the Swiss alps highlights the urgent need to cut greenhouse gas emissions to minimize ice loss. As the first ever UN conference on glaciers opens in Dushanbe, Tajikistan, a new scientific study shows glaciers are even more sensitive to global warming than we thought. The International Cryosphere Climate Initiative makes the connections in this media release.

Aerial view of the impact of the glacier breaking and mud slide that covered the Swiss village of Blatten. Image: Federal Office of Topography Swisstopo

An international study published in Science finds that glaciers are even more sensitive to global warming than previously estimated; with only 24% of present-day glacier mass remaining if the world warms to 2.7°C, the trajectory set by current climate policies.

In contrast, limiting warming to 1.5°C would preserve 54% of glacier mass.

These figures however are global, skewed mostly by the very large glaciers around Antarctica and Greenland. The glacier regions most important to human communities are even more sensitive, with several losing nearly all glacier ice already at 2°C.

This includes the glaciers of the European Alps, the Rockies of the Western U.S. and Canada, and Iceland, with only 10-15% of their 2020 ice levels remaining at 2°C sustained warming. Most hard-hit would be Scandinavia, with no glacier ice remaining at 2°C at all.

All four of these regions are committed to losing at least half their ice already at or below 1°C; starkly mirroring a paper released last week setting the safe margin for Antarctic and Greenland ice sheets at or below that same 1°C level.

The Vatnajökull ice cap on Iceland is the largest glacial structure on the island and the second largest in Europe. It has lost more than 15 percent of its volume since 1890. Image: European Union, Copernicus Sentinel-2 imagery

Even the Hindukush Himalaya, where glaciers feed river basins supporting 2 billion people, show only 25% of 2020 ice remaining at 2°C.

Staying close to 1.5°C on the other hand preserves at least some glacier ice in all regions, even Scandinavia, with 20-30% remaining in the four most sensitive regions; and 40-45% in the Himalayas and Caucuses; stressing the growing urgency of the 1.5°C temperature goal and rapid decarbonization to achieve it.

These results come amidst rising concern about impacts of glacier and snowpack loss by world leaders as the first global UN conference focused on glaciers opens in Dushanbe, Tajikistan on Friday. Officials from over 50 countries are in attendance, including 30 at ministerial level or higher.

Glaciers in Tajikistan and the rest of Central Asia, serving as water towers across the ancient Silk Road civilizations stretching from Pakistan to China, maintain twice as much ice at 1.5°C (60% of 2020 levels) as they do at 2°C (30%).

To get these results, a team of 21 scientists from ten countries used eight glacier models to calculate the potential ice loss of the more than 200,000 glaciers worldwide, under a wide range of global temperature scenarios. For each scenario, they assumed that temperatures would remain constant for thousands of years.

In all scenarios, the glaciers lose mass rapidly over decades and then continue to melt at a slower pace for centuries, even without further warming. This means they will feel the impact of today’s heat for a long time before settling into a new balance as they retreat to higher altitudes.

“Our study makes it painfully clear that every fraction of a degree matters,” says co-lead author Dr. Harry Zekollari from the Vrije Universiteit Brussel. “The choices we make today will resonate for centuries, determining how much of our glaciers can be preserved.”

“Glaciers are good indicators of climate change because their retreat allows us to see with our own eyes how climate is changing…[but t]he situation for glaciers is actually far worse than visible in the mountains today,” says co-lead author Dr. Lilian Schuster from the University of Innsbruck.

A sadly striking feature of the study is that glaciers in the Tropics — the central Andes of Peru, Ecuador and Colombia, as well as East Africa and Indonesia — appear to maintain higher levels of ice, but this is only because they have lost so much already. What remains today is at very high altitudes where ice essentially “evaporates,” rather than melts.

Venezuela’s final glacier, Humboldt lost glacier status in 2024; Indonesia’s ironically named “Infinity Glacier” is likely to follow within the next two years. Germany lost one of its last five remaining glaciers during a heat wave in 2022, and Slovenia’s likely lost its last real glacier a few decades ago.

At another high-level conference on mountains and glaciers earlier this month, named the Sagarmatha Dialogues in honor of Mt. Everest (Sagarmatha), Nepal’s Prime Minister Oli underscored their global importance: “Mountains may seem far away. But their breath keeps half the world alive. From the Arctic to the Andes, from the Alps to the Himalayas – they are the Earth’s water towers….and they are in danger.”

“We have all seen the terrible effects of sea-level rise,” said Hussain Mohamed Latheef, Vice President of Maldives, which held an “underwater” Cabinet meeting to draw attention to the threat already in 2009. “But we see now our brothers and sisters in mountain regions suffering similar threats to their existence: except rather than abandoning homes drowned by the ocean, they are leaving homes drowned in glacier lake floods, or when there’s no more water for crops.”

State Minister of Forests and Environment Rupa B.K of Nepal, at age 32 the youngest minister in attendance, agreed. “We are seeing that these terrible impacts really are just two sides of the same coin. Sea-level rise comes from melting ice; melting ice is turning fertile downstream lands into desert,” she said. “The world needs healthy ice stories to support stable coastlines and downstream communities both; and fossil fuel emissions are robbing us of that future.”

Dr. Irene Quaile-Kersken

Link to the blog of Dr. Irene Quaile-Kersken:

New Blog: https://iceblog.org

Old Blog: https://blogs.dw.com/ice/