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Immagine: NASA Earth Observatory, Jesse Allen and Robert Simmondi più

Two catastrophic years obliterate 10% of Swiss glacier volume

One extreme year follows another. Glaciers in Switzerland lost 6% of their volume in 2022. However, 2023 saw 4% destroyed, representing the second largest decline since measurements began. The Swiss Commission for Cryosphere Observation of the Swiss Academy of Sciences reported that a total of 10% of the ice volume disappeared in only two years.

4.7 metres of ice melted in 2023 at the Concordia Place on the Great Aletsch Glacier.
Immagine: Matthias Huss

Swiss glaciers are melting at a rapidly increasing rate. The acceleration is dramatic, with as much ice being lost in only two years as was the case between 1960 and 1990. The two extreme consecutive years have led to glacier tongues collapsing and the disappearance of many smaller glaciers. For example, measurements of the St. Annafirn glacier in the canton of Uri had to be suspended as a result.

This massive loss of ice is the result of a winter with very low volumes of snow and high temperatures during the summer. The melting of glaciers affected the whole of Switzerland, with glaciers in southern and eastern Switzerland melting almost as severely as in the record year of 2022. Melting of several metres was measured in southern Valais and the Engadin valley at a level above 3200 m, an altitude at which glaciers had until recently preserved their equilibrium. The average ice thickness loss here is up to 3 metres (e.g. the Gries Glacier in Valais, the Basòdino Glacier in the canton of Ticino and the Vadret Pers glacier system in Grisons) and is considerably higher than the values recorded in the hot summer of 2003. The situation between the Bernese Oberland and Valais is less dramatic (e.g. the Aletsch Glacier in Valais and Plaine Morte Glacier in the canton of Bern), as more snow lay here during the winter. Nevertheless, a loss of over 2 metres of the average ice thickness is extremely high.

Record low snow depths in winter

Barely any precipitation was evident in the winter of 2022 / 2023 on both sides of the Alps, and temperatures were very high. As a consequence, considerably less snow than usual was evident at all stations. Conditions at a level above 1000 m stand out in February and the beginning of March. Snow depths measured in the first half of February were in the main somewhat greater than in the winters of 1964, 1990 or 2007, which were characterised by low snowfalls. However, snow levels fell to a new record in the second half of February, reaching only about 30% of the long-term average. More than half the automated stations above 2000 m with a minimum of 25 years of measurement series also indicated new record minimum levels.

The situation normalised briefly in spring, but a dry and extremely warm June meant that snow melted 2-4 weeks earlier than usual. The third-warmest summer since measurements began and a record high zero-degree line at times, which continued into September, were responsible for individual summer snowfalls generally melting very rapidly, which did not help the situation on the glaciers.

Change in ice volume
Change in ice volumeImmagine: GLAMOS
  • Ice on the Vadret dal Murtèl (Grisons) melted rapidly even in mid-September at an altitude of 3100 metres at the foot of the Piz Bernina.
  • Replacing a pole for the measurement of mass balance on the Gries Glacier in Valais. A network of poles (on the right of the photo) facilitates the identification of losses over the entire surface of the glacier.
  • 4.7 metres of ice melted in 2023 (right) at the Concordia Place (Konkordiaplatz) on the Great Aletsch Glacier. The level in 2022 (left) was 6.3 metres, and averaged 2.5 metres between 1950 and 1980.
  • The disappearance of the iconic ice ridge at the Piz Murtèl in Grisons, as viewed from the Piz Corvatsch cable car station, clearly illustrates how the high mountain vista has been transformed.
  • Some snow from last winter was only evident still at very high altitudes, such as here on the Jungfraujoch between the cantons of Bern and Valais.
  • The tongue of the Rhone Glacier in Valais is collapsing. The artificial glacier shroud is unable to prevent this.
  • The measurement program on St. Annafirn (Uri) was discontinued, due to severe shrinkage and rockfall hazards.
  • Glaciologists climb over the collapsed tongue of the Findel Glacier (Valais). The radiantly blue glacial lakes were still covered by dozens of metres of ice a decade ago.
  • In only a few years, the recession of the Findel Glacier tongue (Valais) has uncovered a large valley consisting of glacial debris and dead ice.
  • The area surrounding the huge glacial surface of the Plaine Morte (canton of Bern) is increasingly becoming a field of rocks.
  • Melt water and air flows create impressive cavities below the glacial ice.
  • The disintegration of the Gries Glacier in Valais continues at a rapid pace. Rock was discovered a year ago at the bottom of a crevasse in the middle of the glacier. A veritable island of rocks has now emerged.
  • Ice on the Vadret dal Murtèl (Grisons) melted rapidly even in mid-September at an altitude of 3100 metres at the foot of the Piz Bernina.Immagine: Matthias Huss1/12
  • Replacing a pole for the measurement of mass balance on the Gries Glacier in Valais. A network of poles (on the right of the photo) facilitates the identification of losses over the entire surface of the glacier.Immagine: Matthias Huss2/12
  • 4.7 metres of ice melted in 2023 (right) at the Concordia Place (Konkordiaplatz) on the Great Aletsch Glacier. The level in 2022 (left) was 6.3 metres, and averaged 2.5 metres between 1950 and 1980.Immagine: Matthias Huss3/12
  • The disappearance of the iconic ice ridge at the Piz Murtèl in Grisons, as viewed from the Piz Corvatsch cable car station, clearly illustrates how the high mountain vista has been transformed.Immagine: Matthias Huss4/12
  • Some snow from last winter was only evident still at very high altitudes, such as here on the Jungfraujoch between the cantons of Bern and Valais.Immagine: Matthias Huss5/12
  • The tongue of the Rhone Glacier in Valais is collapsing. The artificial glacier shroud is unable to prevent this.Immagine: Matthias Huss6/12
  • The measurement program on St. Annafirn (Uri) was discontinued, due to severe shrinkage and rockfall hazards.Immagine: Matthias Huss7/12
  • Glaciologists climb over the collapsed tongue of the Findel Glacier (Valais). The radiantly blue glacial lakes were still covered by dozens of metres of ice a decade ago.Immagine: Matthias Huss8/12
  • In only a few years, the recession of the Findel Glacier tongue (Valais) has uncovered a large valley consisting of glacial debris and dead ice.Immagine: Matthias Huss9/12
  • The area surrounding the huge glacial surface of the Plaine Morte (canton of Bern) is increasingly becoming a field of rocks.Immagine: Matthias Huss10/12
  • Melt water and air flows create impressive cavities below the glacial ice.Immagine: Matthias Huss11/12
  • The disintegration of the Gries Glacier in Valais continues at a rapid pace. Rock was discovered a year ago at the bottom of a crevasse in the middle of the glacier. A veritable island of rocks has now emerged.Immagine: Andreas Linsbauer, Daniel Farinotti12/12

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