Climate change threatens 2 of Ecuador's 7 glaciers


IANS | Quito | Updated: 19-02-2019 01:46 IST | Created: 19-02-2019 01:46 IST

Climate change threatens 2 of Ecuador's 7 glaciers

Ecuador could lose two of its seven glaciers over the next few years thanks to global warming, a phenomenon that worries experts because it would alter the paramo ecosystem and its effect on the nation's water supply and humidity, media reported. The most imminent threat concerns the glaciers of Carihuairazo, in Chimborazo province, and the southern Iliniza, between those of Pichincha and Cotopaxi.

"Global estimates forecast a temperature increase of 1.5 degrees C (3 degrees F), a pattern that will not change in the next 12 years," Estefania Avalos, undersecretary of Climate Change at the Environment Ministry of Ecuador (MAE), told Efe. This increase has already left obvious signs that temperatures are changing, but according to another expert, Bolivar Caceres of the National Meteorological and Hydrological Institute (Inamhi), the threat is imminent.

Ecuador has seven glaciers: Antisana, Cotopaxi, Chimborazo, Cayambe, the Ilinizas (north and south), El Altar and Carihuairazo, all located on volcanic craters affected by the greenhouse effect. In the case of Carihuairazo, 96 per cent of the glacier surface has melted, which means it could disappear in just five years, Caceres said, and while no exact forecast has been made for the southern Iliniza, the thaw there has also been noteworthy.

"Up to the end of 2018, an average nationwide loss of 53 per cent of glacier coverage was recorded," said the expert, who warned that it is hard to predict the glaciers' future because climatic conditions change at random, reports Efe. "There are models that indicate they could disappear by late 2100, but they're just models. In the Andes, glaciers never disappear completely but they do shrink dramatically," Caceres said about the regional situation.

The effect of the thaw is most visible in the two glaciers previously mentioned because they are located at an altitude lower than the "line of equilibrium," the average altitude necessary for the glaciers' regeneration. That line is at 5,120 meters (16,798 feet) above sea level, so these two glaciers are in a "state of loss for which no recovery exists."

Carihuairazo is 5,025 meters high, and the Iliniza is 4,750, which increases the threat. The glacialist, who has spent more than 30 years studying both elevations, said the glaciers' shrinkage is a natural phenomenon that has always existed, but in the last 20 years it has increased dramatically due to human activities and the changes in temperatures around the world.

In Ecuador, the mountain peaks with the greatest glacial coverage are the Antisana at a height of 5,704 meters, and the Cayambe at 5,790 meters. The location of the Ecuadorian glaciers is "strategic" because they gather the "atmospheric circulation from the Pacific" and the "humidity of the Amazon region," said Ruben Bazantes, glacialist at the National Polytechnic University.

This location makes them prone to powerful rainstorms that reach some 6,000 millimeters (236 inches) a year and makes Ecuador's glaciers different from others in the Andes. Apart from their size, authorities follow very closely the secondary consequences of the meltdown, because these glaciers are true regulators of the water supply.

Though glaciers in Ecuador are not in any way indispensable for providing water to the population -- they contribute just 2 percent to the nearby towns -- their disappearance could affect supplies in the future. Another of the consequences that most concern the experts is the extinction of native animal and plant species on the Ecuadorian paramos, and the possible arrival of invasive species because of changes in the ecosystem.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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