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The Okjokull glacier in Iceland has melted away due to climate change (AFP Photo) |
Reykjavik
(AFP) - Iceland on Sunday honours the passing of Okjokull, its first glacier
lost to climate change, as scientists warn that some 400 others on the
subarctic island risk the same fate.
A bronze
plaque will be unveiled in a ceremony starting around 1400 GMT to mark Okjokull
-- which translates to "Ok glacier" -- in the west of Iceland, in the
presence of local researchers and their peers at Rice University in the United
States, who initiated the project.
Iceland's
Prime Minister Katrin Jakobsdottir, Environment Minister Gudmundur Ingi
Gudbrandsson, and the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Mary
Robinson are also due to attend the event.
"This
will be the first monument to a glacier lost to climate change anywhere in the
world," Cymene Howe, associate professor of anthropology at Rice
University, said in July.
The plaque
bears the inscription "A letter to the future," and is intended to
raise awareness about the decline of glaciers and the effects of climate
change.
"In
the next 200 years all our glaciers are expected to follow the same path. This
monument is to acknowledge that we know what is happening and what needs to be
done. Only you know if we did it," the plaque reads.
It is also
labelled "415 ppm CO2," referring to the record level of carbon
dioxide measured in the atmosphere last May.
"Memorials
everywhere stand for either human accomplishments, like the deeds of historic
figures, or the losses and deaths we recognise as important," researcher
Howe said.
"By
memorialising a fallen glacier, we want to emphasise what is being lost -- or
dying -- the world over, and also draw attention to the fact that this is
something that humans have 'accomplished', although it is not something we
should be proud of."
Howe noted
that the conversation about climate change can be abstract, with many dire
statistics and sophisticated scientific models that can feel incomprehensible.
"Perhaps
a monument to a lost glacier is a better way to fully grasp what we now
face," she said, highlighting "the power of symbols and ceremony to
provoke feelings".
Iceland loses about 11 billion tonnes of ice per year, and scientists fear all of the island country's 400-plus glaciers will be gone by 2200, according to Howe and her Rice University colleague Dominic Boyer.
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This NASA
handout image shows the Okjökull glacier in 1986 (AFP Photo)
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Iceland loses about 11 billion tonnes of ice per year, and scientists fear all of the island country's 400-plus glaciers will be gone by 2200, according to Howe and her Rice University colleague Dominic Boyer.
Stripped
in 2014
Glaciologists
stripped Okjokull of its glacier status in 2014, a first for Iceland.
In 1890,
the glacier ice covered 16 square kilometres (6.2 square miles) but by 2012, it
measured just 0.7 square kilometres, according to a report from the University
of Iceland from 2017.
In 2014,
"we made the decision that this was no longer a living glacier, it was
only dead ice, it was not moving," Oddur Sigurdsson, a glaciologist with
the Icelandic Meteorological Office, told AFP.
To have the
status of a glacier, the mass of ice and snow must be thick enough to move by
its own weight. For that to happen the mass must be approximately 40 to 50
metres (130 to 165 feet) thick, he said.
According
to a study published by the International Union for Conservation of Nature
(IUCN)in April, nearly half of the world's heritage sites could lose their
glaciers by 2100 if greenhouse gas emissions continue at the current rate.
Sigurdsson
said he feared "that nothing can be done to stop it."
"The
inertia of the climate system is such that, even if we could stop introducing
greenhouse gases into the atmosphere right now, it will keep on warming for
century and a half or two centuries before it reaches equilibrium."
Iceland's Vatnajokull
National Park, which was added to UNESCO's World Heritage List in early July,
is home to, and named after, the largest ice cap in Europe.
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