Current:Home > BackSwiss glaciers under threat again as heat wave drives zero-temperature level to record high-Angel Dreamer Wealth Society D1 Reviews & Insights
Swiss glaciers under threat again as heat wave drives zero-temperature level to record high
View Date:2025-01-11 13:03:07
GENEVA (AP) — The Swiss weather service said Monday a heat wave has driven the zero-degree Celsius level to its highest altitude since recordings on it in Switzerland began nearly 70 years ago, an ominous new sign for the country’s vaunted glaciers.
MeteoSwiss says the zero-degree isotherm level reached 5,298 meters (17,381 feet) above sea level over Switzerland overnight Sunday to Monday. All of Switzerland’s snow-capped Alpine peaks — the highest being the 4,634-meter (15,203-foot) Monte Rosa summit — were in air temperatures over the level where water freezes to ice, raising prospects of a thaw.
Even Mont Blanc, Europe’s highest mountain along the Italian-French border at some 4,809 meters (15,800 feet), is affected, the weather agency said based on readings from its weather balloons.
The new high altitude eclipsed a previous record set in July 2022, a year that experts say was particularly devastating for the glaciers of Switzerland. Readings have been taken on the zero-degree altitude level since 1954.
“An exceptionally powerful anticyclone and warm air of subtropical origin are currently ensuring scorching weather over the country,” MeteoSwiss said on its website, adding that many measuring stations in Switzerland have set new temperature records in the second half of August.
MeteoSwiss meterologist Mikhaël Schwander said it marked only the third time such readings had been tallied above 5,000 meters — and that the level was generally around 3,500 to 4,000 meters in a typical summer.
“With a zero-degree isotherm far above 5,000m (meters above sea level), all glaciers in the Alps are exposed to melt — up to their highest altitudes,” said Daniel Farinotti, a glaciologist at the federal technical university in Zurich, ETHZ, in an email. “Such events are rare and detrimental to the glaciers’ health, as they live from snow being accumulated at high altitudes.”
“If such conditions persist in the longer term, glaciers are set to be lost irreversibly,” he said.
A Swiss study last year found that the country’s 1,400-odd glaciers — the most in Europe — had lost more than half their total volume since the early 1930s, including a 12-percent decline over the previous six years alone.
___
Follow AP’s climate and environment coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/climate-and-environment
veryGood! (5782)
Related
- The Latin Grammys are almost here for a 25th anniversary celebration
- Inside Clean Energy: Who’s Ahead in the Race for Offshore Wind Jobs in the US?
- Inside Clean Energy: Taking Stock of the Energy Storage Boom Happening Right Now
- Q&A: The Activist Investor Who Shook Up the Board at ExxonMobil, on How—or if—it Changed the Company
- Disruptions to Amtrak service continue after fire near tracks in New York City
- The Clean Energy Transition Enters Hyperdrive
- Little Big Town to Host First-Ever People's Choice Country Awards
- 10 Trendy Amazon Jewelry Finds You'll Want to Wear All the Time
- Sydney Sweeney Slams Women Empowerment in the Industry as Being Fake
- Warming Trends: A Possible Link Between Miscarriages and Heat, Trash-Eating Polar Bears and a More Hopeful Work of Speculative Climate Fiction
Ranking
- Driver dies after crashing on hurricane-damaged highway in North Carolina
- How the Fed got so powerful
- When the Power Goes Out, Who Suffers? Climate Epidemiologists Are Now Trying to Figure That Out
- Mattel unveils a Barbie with Down syndrome
- Target will be closed on Thanksgiving: Here’s when stores open on Black Friday
- Indian Court Rules That Nature Has Legal Status on Par With Humans—and That Humans Are Required to Protect It
- Gen Z's dream job in the influencer industry
- Warmer Nights Caused by Climate Change Take a Toll on Sleep
Recommendation
-
Oklahoma school district adding anti-harassment policies after nonbinary teen’s death
-
Pamper Yourself With the Top 18 Trending Beauty Products on Amazon Right Now
-
A ‘Living Shoreline’ Takes Root in New York’s Jamaica Bay
-
How Is the Jet Stream Connected to Simultaneous Heat Waves Across the Globe?
-
Donna Kelce Includes Sweet Nod to Taylor Swift During Today Appearance With Craig Melvin
-
Why Chris Evans Deactivated His Social Media Accounts
-
Space Tourism Poses a Significant ‘Risk to the Climate’
-
Why the Chesapeake Bay’s Beloved Blue Crabs Are at an All-Time Low