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Climate Change Indicators: Arctic Glaciers

This indicator shows the cumulative change in the mass balance of Arctic glaciers.

Figure 1. Cumulative Mass Balance of Eight Arctic Glaciers, 1945–2020
Line graph showing the cumulative change in mass balance of a set of eight glaciers located at a latitude of 66°N or higher with data from 1945 to 2020.
Download Data  Download Image

This figure shows the cumulative change in mass balance of a set of eight glaciers located at a latitude of 66°N or higher with data beginning in 1945. Each time series has been adjusted to make 1970 a common zero point because this was the first year for which mass balance data are available for all eight glaciers. Negative values indicate a net loss of ice and snow compared with the base year of 1970. For consistency, measurements are in meters of water equivalent, which reflects the mass loss of the glacier by representing changes in the glacier’s average thickness.

Data sources: WGMS, 20219
Web update: July 2022

Key Points | Background | About the Indicator | About the Data | Technical Documentation

Key Points

  • Since 1945, the eight Arctic glaciers in Figure 1 have experienced a decline in mass balance overall. One exception to this pattern is Engabreen, near the subpolar zone along the coast of Norway, which gained mass over the period of record. This trend is anomalous and does not reflect the significant global loss of land ice as measured and catalogued from numerous glaciers elsewhere in the Arctic and around the world in the 20th century.6 Engabreen is more strongly influenced by precipitation than glaciers elsewhere in the Arctic.7
  • The loss of land-based ice in the Arctic has accelerated in recent decades. The Arctic is the largest contributing source of land ice to global sea level rise.8

Background

Rapid changes are occurring across the Arctic, where air temperatures are warming twice as fast as the global average temperature.1 The loss of land-based ice in the Arctic has accelerated in recent decades, and since at least 1972, the Arctic has been the dominant source of global sea-level rise.2 Greenland is the largest contributor to global sea-level rise from Arctic land ice, followed by small glaciers. If increases in greenhouse gas concentrations continue at current rates, it is expected that many of the smallest glaciers across the Arctic would disappear entirely by mid-century.3,4 As the Glaciers indicator explains, glaciers are important as an indicator of climate change and provide visible evidence of changes in temperature and precipitation.

Retreating glaciers and thawing permafrost in the Arctic are creating local and regional hazards that disrupt lives and livelihoods, infrastructure, sustainable development, and national security.5

About the Indicator

The indicator focuses on a set of eight routinely-measured glaciers at a latitude of 66°N or higher with data back to at least 1970—in one case, 1945. Figure 1 shows the cumulative mass balance of these glaciers from 1945 to 2020. This measurement of mass balance is consistent with EPA’s Glaciers indicator, just focusing in this case on eight routinely measured glaciers north of the Arctic Circle. “Mass balance” refers to the net gain or loss of snow and ice (accumulation versus melting, sublimation, and calving). The measurements are in meters of water equivalent, which reflects the mass loss of the glacier by representing changes in the glacier’s average thickness. Cumulative change is determined from the base year of 1970, the first year in which all eight glaciers had annual mass balance data.

About the Data

Indicator Notes

The relationship between climate change and glacier mass balance is complex, and the observed changes at specific reference glaciers reflect a combination of global and local variations in temperature and precipitation. Individual glaciers also vary in their structure, flow, and response to climate. Slightly different measurement and analysis methods have been used at different glaciers, but overall trends are similar.

Long-term measurements are available for only a very small percentage of the world’s glaciers. This indicator does not include the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets, although two decades of satellite data suggest that these ice sheets are also experiencing a net loss of ice (see the Ice Sheets indicator).10 Continued satellite data collection will allow scientists to evaluate long-term trends in the future.

Data Sources

The World Glacier Monitoring Service compiled data for Figure 1, based on measurements collected by a variety of organizations around the world. Historical data, as well as periodic reports and measurements of the reference glaciers, are available at: https://wgms.ch. This indicator can also be found at: www.globalchange.gov/indicators.

Technical Documentation

  • Download related technical information PDF

References

1. AMAP (Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme). 2015. Methane as an Arctic forcer. Oslo, Norway. www.amap.no/documents/doc/amap-assessment-2015-methane-as-an-arctic-climate-forcer/1285.

2. AMAP (Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme). 2017. Snow, water, ice and permafrost in the Arctic (SWIPA) 2017. Summary for policy-makers. www.amap.no/documents/doc/snow-water-ice-and-permafrost.-summary-for-policy-makers/1532.

3. AMAP (Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme). 2017. Snow, water, ice and permafrost in the Arctic (SWIPA) 2017. Summary for policy-makers. www.amap.no/documents/doc/snow-water-ice-and-permafrost.-summary-for-policy-makers/1532.

4. AMAP (Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme). 2019. AMAP climate change update 2019: An update to key findings of snow, water, ice and permafrost in the Arctic (SWIPA) 2017. Oslo, Norway.

5. Wolken, G.J., A.K. Liljedahl, M. Brubaker, J.A. Coe, G. Fiske, H. Hvidtfeldt Christiansen, M. Jacquemart, B.M. Jones, A. Kääb, F. Løvholt, S. Natali, A.C.A. Rudy, and D. Streletskiy. 2021. Glacier and permafrost hazards. In: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Arctic report card: Update for 2021. https://arctic.noaa.gov/Report-Card/Report-Card-2021/ArtMID/8022/ArticleID/951/Glacier-and-Permafrost-Hazards.

6. Pfeffer, W.T., A.A. Arendt, A. Bliss, T. Bolch, J.G. Cogley, A.S. Gardner, and E.S. Miles. 2014. The Randolph Glacier Inventory: A globally complete inventory of glaciers. J. Glaciol. 60(221):537–552.

7. Paul, F., and L.M. Andreassen. 2009. A new glacier inventory for the Svartisen region, Norway, from Landsat ETM+ data: Challenges and change assessment. J. Glaciol. 55(192):607–618.

8. Box, J.E., W.T. Colgan, T.R. Christensen, N.M. Schmidt, M. Lund, F.-J.W. Parmentier, R. Brown, U.S. Bhatt, E.S. Euskirchen, V.E. Romanovsky, J.E. Walsh, J.E. Overland, M. Wang, R.W. Corell, W.N. Meier, B. Wouters, S. Mernild, J. Mård, J. Pawlak, and M.S. Olsen. 2019. Key indicators of Arctic climate change: 1971–2017. Environ. Res. Lett. 14(4):045010. https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1748-9326/aafc1b/meta.

9. WGMS (World Glacier Monitoring Service). 2021. Global glacier change bulletin no. 4 (2018–2019). Zemp, M., I. S.U. Nussbaumer, J. Bannwart, F. Paul, and M. Hoelzle (eds.). ICSU (WDS)/IUGG (IACS)/UNEP/UNESCO/WMO. Zurich, Switzerland: World Glacier Monitoring Service. wgms.ch/downloads/WGMS_GGCB_04.pdf. Based on database version: doi:10.5904/wgms-fog-2021-05.

10. Melillo, J.M., T.C. Richmond, and G.W. Yohe (eds.). 2014. Climate change impacts in the United States: The third National Climate Assessment. U.S. Global Change Research Program. https://nca2014.globalchange.gov.


Learn about other indicators in this section

Arctic Sea Ice
Antarctic Sea Ice
Ice Sheets
Glaciers
Arctic Glaciers
Glaciers in Glacier National Park
Lake Ice
Great Lakes Ice Cover
Ice Breakup in Three Alaskan Rivers
Snowfall
Snow Cover
Snowpack
Permafrost
Freeze-Thaw Conditions

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Last updated on May 30, 2024
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