United Nations Secretary General António Guterres is raising the alarm over "a frightening report" on climate that shows 2020 was one of the three hottest years on record, marked by wildfires, droughts, floods, melting glaciers and rising sea levels.
Glaciers are melting faster, losing 31% more snow and ice per year than they did 15 years earlier, according to three-dimensional satellite measurements of all the world's mountain glaciers.
Scientists blame human-caused climate change.
Using 20 years of recently declassified satellite data, scientists calculated that the world's 220,000 mountain glaciers are losing more than 328 billion tons of ice and snow per year since 2015, according to a study in Wednesday's journal Nature. That's enough melt flowing into the world's rising oceans to put Switzerland under almost 24 feet of water each year.
The annual melt rate from 2015 to 2019 is 78 billion more tons a year than it was from 2000 to 2004. Global thinning rates, different than volume of water lost, doubled in the last 20 years, and "that's enormous," said Romain Hugonnet, a glaciologist at ETH Zurich and the University of Toulouse in France who led the study.
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Half the world's glacial loss is coming from the United States and Canada.
Alaska's melt rates are "among the highest on the planet," with the Columbia glacier retreating about 115 feet a year, Hugonnet said.
This September 2017 photo provided by researcher Brian Menounos shows the Klinaklini glacier in British Columbia, Canada. The glacier and the adjacent icefield lost about 15 gigatons of water from 2000 to 2019, Menounos says.
Almost all the world's glaciers are melting, even ones in Tibet that used to be stable, the study found. Except for a few in Iceland and Scandinavia that are fed by increased precipitation, the melt rates are accelerating around the world.
The near-uniform melting "mirrors the global increase in temperature" and is from the burning of coal, oil and gas, Hugonnet said. Some smaller glaciers are disappearing entirely. Two years ago, scientists, activists and government officials in Iceland held a funeral for a small glacier.
"Ten years ago, we were saying that the glaciers are the indicator of climate change, but now actually they've become a memorial of the climate crisis," said World Glacier Monitoring Service Director Michael Zemp, who wasn't part of the study.
The study is the first to use this 3D satellite imagery to examine all of Earth's glaciers not connected to ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctic. Past studies either only used a fraction of the glaciers or estimated the loss of Earth's glaciers using gravity measurements from orbit. Those gravity readings have large margins of error and aren't as useful, Zemp said.
Ohio State University's Lonnie Thompson said the new study painted an "alarming picture."
Shrinking glaciers are a problem for millions of people who rely on seasonal glacial melt for daily water, and rapid melting can cause deadly outbursts from glacial lakes in places like India, Hugonnet said.
But the largest threat is sea level rise. The world's oceans are already rising because warm water expands and because of melting ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctica, but glaciers are responsible for 21% of sea level rise, more than the ice sheets, the study said. The ice sheets are larger longer term threats for sea level rise.
Photos: Melting of world's glaciers called 'alarming'
This May 9, 2020, file photo shows the Mendenhall Glacier in Juneau, Alaska. The U.S. Forest Service says the glacier, often reached by trail or by crossing Mendenhall Lake, is retreating. According to a study in the journal Nature, the world's 220,000 glaciers are melting faster now than in the 2000s. (AP Photo/Becky Bohrer)
This Sept. 1, 2015, file photo shows the Exit Glacier in Seward, Alaska, which according to National Park Service research has retreated approximately 1.25 miles over the past 200 years. According to a study released Wednesday, the world's 220,000 glaciers are melting faster now than in the 2000s. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)
An iceberg floats in the Nuup Kangerlua Fjord near Nuuk in southwestern Greenland on Aug. 1, 2017. Greenland's glaciers have been melting and retreating at an accelerated pace in recent years due to warmer temperatures. (AP Photo/David Goldman)
In this July 22, 2017, file photo, a polar bear climbs out of the water to walk on the ice in the Franklin Strait in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago. Climate scientists point to the Arctic as a place where climate change is most noticeable with dramatic sea ice loss, a melting Greenland ice sheet, receding glaciers and thawing permafrost. (AP Photo/David Goldman)
This Nov. 11, 2016, file photo shows the Taylor Glacier near McMurdo Station, Antarctica, which is melting more than six times faster than it did in the 1980s. (Mark Ralston/Pool Photo via AP)
This Sept. 22, 2018, file photo shows the Baishui Glacier No. 1 on the Jade Dragon Snow Mountain in the southern province of Yunnan in China. Scientists say it is one of the fastest melting glaciers in the world due to climate change. (AP Photo/Sam McNeil)
This Jan. 3, 1976, photo made by the National Reconnaissance Office shows Mount Everest at center. This and other once-classified Cold War era spy satellite images are showing scientists that glaciers on the Himalayas have been melting much faster than they used to. (National Reconnaissance Office via AP)
An Aug. 16, 2019, aerial view shows large icebergs floating as the sun rises near Kulusuk, Greenland, which has been melting faster. (AP Photo/Felipe Dana)
In this Aug. 16, 2019, photo, large icebergs float away as the sun rises near Kulusuk, Greenland. (AP Photo/Felipe Dana)
In this Aug. 15, 2019, photo, a boat navigates at night next to large icebergs near the town of Kulusuk, in eastern Greenland. Greenland's ice has been melting for many years. (AP Photo/Felipe Dana)
In this Aug. 15, 2019, photo, a boat navigates at night next to large icebergs in eastern Greenland, where ice has been melting for decades. (AP Photo/Felipe Dana)
In this Aug. 15, 2019, photo, a large iceberg floats away as the sun sets near Kulusuk, Greenland. (AP Photo/Felipe Dana)
Risk of part of the Planpincieux glacier breaking off amid climate warming in the Alps prompted Italian authorities to forbid hikers and tourists from a section of the Val Ferrat area, shown in this June 2009 photo from the famed Tour du Mont Blanc trail outside Courmayeur, Italy. (AP Photo / Randall Hackley)
This satellite photo provided by UNITAR-UNOSAT, and taken by USGS/NASA on Sunday, Aug. 25, 2019, shows the Mont Blanc massif in the Italian Alps near Courmayeur. Italian officials sounded an alarm in 2019 over climate change due to the threat from a fast-moving melting glacier, located on the Grande Jorasses peak of the massif. (USGS/NASA via AP)
The Planpincieux glacier located in the Alps on the Grande Jorasses peak of the Mont Blanc massif, is seen from Val Ferret, a popular hiking area on the south side of the Mont Blanc, near Courmayeur, northern Italy, Sept. 25, 2019. (AP Photo/Antonio Calanni)
In this April 11, 2015, file photo, tents are seen set up for climbers on the Khumbu Glacier, with Mount Khumbutse, center, and Khumbu Icefall, right, seen in background, at Everest Base Camp in Nepal. Floods that slammed into two hydroelectric plants and damaged villages in northern India were set off by a break on a Himalayan glacier upstream. (AP Photo/Tashi Sherpa)

