Jump to content

Heartbreaking Photos Reveal Melting Swiss Glaciers: A 15-Year Comparison


Social Media

Recommended Posts

Heartbreaking Photos Reveal Melting Swiss Glaciers: A 15-Year Comparison 

 

Nice , Was that by chance a Winter Pic and a Summer Pic 15 yrs  Later?  What about scare mongering hey.

Just look at the Real change in the  Cold/hot world.  

https://museum.wales/articles/1036/When-Antarctica-went-into-the-deep-freeze/#:~:text=Antarctica hasn't always been,the Eocene and Oligocene epochs.

 

  • Confused 5
  • Sad 2
  • Love It 1
  • Agree 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

12 hours ago, Social Media said:

A small pool at the bottom of the glacier, barely visible in 2009, has transformed into a vast green lake by 2024.

 

Great news for fish. 

 

12 hours ago, Social Media said:

 

 

 

Porter shared the emotional impact of witnessing this drastic change, stating, “Not gonna lie, it made me cry,” in a post on the social media platform X.

 

He's a poet who don't know it.

 

The only thing heartbreaking is a middle aged man posting "Not gonna lie" on X. Speak like an adult for gods sake, you're not a teenager.

  • Confused 3
  • Sad 2
  • Thumbs Up 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Happening all over the world.

This is Jasper National Park in Alberta, the glacier has been retreating since the first European explores came across in in the 1850's for whatever that's worth.

As a boy in the 60's we could park in the car park and walk on the glacier

Now you have to take a offroad bus several kilometers to get to Athabasca glacier

As it's gotten smaller in mass the retreat has accelerated

 

image.png.936c8644c4c9293ba095965ee76ba4d4.png

  • Like 1
  • Haha 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

8 hours ago, Roo Island said:

We've seen the same in many places around the world. From the far south of Southern America to new Zealand  to Europe. Crazy times. And Crazy people who try to deny what's happening

Overall glacier mass is shrinking.   The balance sheet isn't as bad as the alarmist want you to think.

 

Some glaciers are actually gaining mass, but that doesn't fit the spin.  An example, a few glaciers in the Karakoram mountain range along the India-China-Pakistan border are gaining mass.

 

It's called climate change for a reason.  Accurate info about glacier and ice sheets is very limited, as only done the last 30 ish years.

 

You also won't hear about the glaciers in S. America, as don't fit the spin either.

 

A lot more research needed there.

Edited by KhunLA
  • Like 1
  • Thumbs Up 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 8/9/2024 at 9:22 AM, KhunLA said:

Overall glacier mass is shrinking.   The balance sheet isn't as bad as the alarmist want you to think.

 

Some glaciers are actually gaining mass, but that doesn't fit the spin.  An example, a few glaciers in the Karakoram mountain range along the India-China-Pakistan border are gaining mass.

 

It's called climate change for a reason.  Accurate info about glacier and ice sheets is very limited, as only done the last 30 ish years.

 

You also won't hear about the glaciers in S. America, as don't fit the spin either.

 

A lot more research needed there.

I agree. Your deep thoughts on the subject are persuasive. We should wait until the problem becomes grossly obvious before we take any action at all beyond yammering about it.

 

I propose that we wait until the 'balance sheet' is gushing red and then have prolonged discussions about how to turn it around after, of course,we spend a few (more) decades doing 'research'.

 

Besides that, I'm 74 and don't give a hoot about how subsequent generations may suffer for my procrastination. I and my generation have already taken the big sweet juicy bite out of the apple and don't give a damn about the worms anymore. I won't even think about it until it's extremely clear that we are in very deep sh*t.

 

Makes sense to me. No?

Edited by RocketDog
  • Sad 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, RocketDog said:

I agree. Your deep thoughts on the subject are persuasive. We should wait until the problem becomes grossly obvious before we take any action at all beyond yammering about it.

 

I propose that we wait until the 'balance sheet' is gushing red and then have prolonged discussions about how to turn it around after, of course,we spend a few (more) decades doing 'research'.

 

Besides that, I'm 74 and don't give a hoot about how subsequent generations may suffer for my procrastination. I and my generation have already taken the big sweet juicy bite out of the apple and don't give a damn about the worms anymore. I won't even think about it until it's extremely clear that we are in very deep sh*t.

 

Makes sense to me. No?

You can't change the climate, or stop the climate.  MMCC is a marketing tool for businesses for profits, and govt for tax revenue.  

 

Human impact of the climate is so minute, it's not worth mentioning.  None of the science is based on facts IMHO, just a bunch of paid scientist/lobbyist for the bottom line.

  • Sad 2
  • Agree 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 8/8/2024 at 4:19 PM, digger70 said:

Heartbreaking Photos Reveal Melting Swiss Glaciers: A 15-Year Comparison 

 

Nice , Was that by chance a Winter Pic and a Summer Pic 15 yrs  Later?  What about scare mongering hey.

Just look at the Real change in the  Cold/hot world.  

https://museum.wales/articles/1036/When-Antarctica-went-into-the-deep-freeze/#:~:text=Antarctica hasn't always been,the Eocene and Oligocene epochs.

 

I'm assuming from your user name you are not from Europe, and probably don't really understand that Winters in Europe can be quite cold, hence your assumption that t-shirts only are often worn a European winter.

 

Some reading for you

 

https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Matteo-Mattavelli-2/publication/295918492_Develpment_of_a_Glaciological_Spatial_Data_Infrastructure_to_assess_glaciers_response_to_climatic_fluctuations/links/56d0816d08ae4d8d64a38fc0/Develpment-of-a-Glaciological-Spatial-Data-Infrastructure-to-assess-glaciers-response-to-climatic-fluctuations.pdf?origin=publication_detail&_tp=eyJjb250ZXh0Ijp7ImZpcnN0UGFnZSI6Il9kaXJlY3QiLCJwYWdlIjoicHVibGljYXRpb25Eb3dubG9hZCIsInByZXZpb3VzUGFnZSI6InB1YmxpY2F0aW9uIn19

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 8/9/2024 at 2:22 AM, Roo Island said:

We've seen the same in many places around the world. From the far south of Southern America to new Zealand  to Europe. Crazy times. And Crazy people who try to deny what's happening

They reckon the Great Barrier Reef will disappear in about 30 years due to warming ocean 

  • Confused 1
  • Haha 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 8/9/2024 at 9:22 AM, KhunLA said:

Overall glacier mass is shrinking.   The balance sheet isn't as bad as the alarmist want you to think.

 

Some glaciers are actually gaining mass, but that doesn't fit the spin.  An example, a few glaciers in the Karakoram mountain range along the India-China-Pakistan border are gaining mass.

 

It's called climate change for a reason.  Accurate info about glacier and ice sheets is very limited, as only done the last 30 ish years.

 

You also won't hear about the glaciers in S. America, as don't fit the spin either.

 

A lot more research needed there.

About South America. First of all, the link is to Patagonia. Patagonia does not encompass all of South America. In fact, only the southern portion of the Andes is located in South America. In addition, the glaciers in Patagonia are shrinking. And they are nowhere nearly as large as the glaciers in Greenland and Antarctica

This is from the article you linked to:

Apart from in Patagonia, speeds like this are only known to be reached by the glaciers of Greenland and Antarctica—far and away the largest in the world.

"According to studies conducted by Matthias Braun from the Institute of Geography at FAU, climate change means, on average, the ice in the glaciers in the Patagonian icefields is becoming one meter less thick every year. This is ice loss at a record-breaking scale and another good reason for keeping a close eye on the Patagonian icefields and using cutting-edge scientific methods to survey them."

https://phys.org/news/2024-03-icefields-south-america-larger-glaciers.html

 

As for spin. The only spinning going on is yours.

"Compared to the great ice sheets of Antarctica and Greenland, mountain glaciers make up a small fraction of global ice volume. The figure is less than 1%: if they all vanished the resulting amount of global sea level rise would be around 0.32 metres. Of much greater importance is their role as freshwater storage reservoirs and their potential loss represents a serious threat to countries where this water supply is regarded as vital."

https://skepticalscience.com/himalayan-glaciers-growing.htm

 

  • Haha 1
  • Agree 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 8/8/2024 at 6:19 PM, digger70 said:

Heartbreaking Photos Reveal Melting Swiss Glaciers: A 15-Year Comparison 

 

Nice , Was that by chance a Winter Pic and a Summer Pic 15 yrs  Later?  What about scare mongering hey.

Just look at the Real change in the  Cold/hot world.  

https://museum.wales/articles/1036/When-Antarctica-went-into-the-deep-freeze/#:~:text=Antarctica hasn't always been,the Eocene and Oligocene epochs.

 

Don’t you think it is duplicitous to link THAT article to a topic regarding anthropogenic climate disruption or are you really so uninformed ? 

 

 

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

22 hours ago, RocketDog said:

I agree. Your deep thoughts on the subject are persuasive. We should wait until the problem becomes grossly obvious before we take any action at all beyond yammering about it.

 

I propose that we wait until the 'balance sheet' is gushing red and then have prolonged discussions about how to turn it around after, of course,we spend a few (more) decades doing 'research'.

 

 

Please enlighten us all how you would turn it around.

 

More taxes?

More funding for a select few ultrarich climate change propagandists who fly around the world in their fuel guzzling private jets, preaching what others should do?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 minutes ago, CallumWK said:

 

 

Please enlighten us all how you would turn it around.

 

More taxes?

More funding for a select few ultrarich climate change propagandists who fly around the world in their fuel guzzling private jets, preaching what others should do?

What're you, a denier? The only way to save the world is to vote for leftists, and DO NOT ask them how, they care about the Earth, that's how! 

  • Confused 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

9 minutes ago, Yellowtail said:

What're you, a denier? The only way to save the world is to vote for leftists, and DO NOT ask them how, they care about the Earth, that's how! 

Better to vote Trump - they'll laugh at concerns and do nothing -  start by denying climate change - then say it's real but a natural variation and not man made and no big deal - then say it is man made but no big deal - then it could be a big deal but we have to adapt - meanwhile scientists look for real solutions. Have to be careful how money is spent but money needs to be spent in my humblest of opinions. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 minutes ago, Fat is a type of crazy said:

Better to vote Trump - they'll laugh at concerns and do nothing -  start by denying climate change - then say it's real but a natural variation and not man made and no big deal - then say it is man made but no big deal - then it could be a big deal but we have to adapt - meanwhile scientists look for real solutions. Have to be careful how money is spent but money needs to be spent in my humblest of opinions. 

Real solutions like what? 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

25 minutes ago, CallumWK said:

 

 

Please enlighten us all how you would turn it around.

 

More taxes?

More funding for a select few ultrarich climate change propagandists who fly around the world in their fuel guzzling private jets, preaching what others should do?

The turning around is already underway.

Global spending on clean energy technologies and infrastructure on track to hit $2 trillion in 2024 even as higher financing costs hinder new projects, notably in emerging and developing economies

Despite pressures on financing, global investment in clean energy is set to reach almost double the amount going to fossil fuels in 2024, helped by improving supply chains and lower costs for clean technologies, according to a new IEA report.

Total energy investment worldwide is expected to exceed $3 trillion in 2024 for the first time, with some $2 trillion set to go toward clean technologies – including renewables, electric vehicles, nuclear power, grids, storage, low-emissions fuels, efficiency improvements and heat pumps – according to the latest edition of the IEA’s annual World Energy Investment report.

https://www.iea.org/news/investment-in-clean-energy-this-year-is-set-to-be-twice-the-amount-going-to-fossil-fuels

 

Giant batteries drain economics of gas power plants

iant batteries that ensure stable power supply by offsetting intermittent renewable supplies are becoming cheap enough to make developers abandon scores of projects for gas-fired generation world-wide.
The long-term economics of gas-fired plants, used in Europe and some parts of the United States primarily to compensate for the intermittent nature of wind and solar power, are changing quickly, according to Reuters' interviews with more than a dozen power plant developers, project finance bankers, analysts and consultants.

They said some battery operators are already supplying back-up power to grids at a price competitive with gas power plants, meaning gas will be used less.

https://archive.ph/PXJL3

 

And even cheaper batteries are about to go into production:

 

Energy project to use batteries made in West Virginia

Construction of the factory has been “substantially completed,” and the company is in the process of “ramping up its manufacturing workforce, ahead of starting high-volume production later this year,” according Jaramillo.

https://www.wvnews.com/news/wvnews/energy-project-to-use-batteries-made-in-west-virginia/article_be5c0a0e-559a-11ef-9d69-2fb32b22b9bc.html

 

FYI Jaramillo was formerly the head of battery production at Tesla.

 

Iron-air batteries: long-duration grid storage targets 1/10th the cost of lithium-ion

The target price tag of $20/kWh (one-tenth the cost of lithium-ion battery storage) can allow wind and solar to deliver firm, stable power cost-competitively with existing fossil generation. Last year, Form Energy (the company commercialising the innovation) took an order from Georgia Power in the U.S. for a 15-megawatt/1,500-megawatt-hour system, and is building a new commercial-scale battery manufacturing facility in West Virginia. Such solutions are essential to the clean energy transition. Halber points at studies that predict that up to 140 TWh of grid storage will be needed globally by 2040.

https://energypost.eu/iron-air-batteries-long-duration-grid-storage-targets-1-10th-the-cost-of-lithium-ion/

 

And this is just one technology. There are lots of others coming online.

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, placeholder said:

The turning around is already underway.

Global spending on clean energy technologies and infrastructure on track to hit $2 trillion in 2024 even as higher financing costs hinder new projects, notably in emerging and developing economies

Despite pressures on financing, global investment in clean energy is set to reach almost double the amount going to fossil fuels in 2024, helped by improving supply chains and lower costs for clean technologies, according to a new IEA report.

Total energy investment worldwide is expected to exceed $3 trillion in 2024 for the first time, with some $2 trillion set to go toward clean technologies – including renewables, electric vehicles, nuclear power, grids, storage, low-emissions fuels, efficiency improvements and heat pumps – according to the latest edition of the IEA’s annual World Energy Investment report.

https://www.iea.org/news/investment-in-clean-energy-this-year-is-set-to-be-twice-the-amount-going-to-fossil-fuels

 

Giant batteries drain economics of gas power plants

iant batteries that ensure stable power supply by offsetting intermittent renewable supplies are becoming cheap enough to make developers abandon scores of projects for gas-fired generation world-wide.
The long-term economics of gas-fired plants, used in Europe and some parts of the United States primarily to compensate for the intermittent nature of wind and solar power, are changing quickly, according to Reuters' interviews with more than a dozen power plant developers, project finance bankers, analysts and consultants.

They said some battery operators are already supplying back-up power to grids at a price competitive with gas power plants, meaning gas will be used less.

https://archive.ph/PXJL3

 

And even cheaper batteries are about to go into production:

 

Energy project to use batteries made in West Virginia

Construction of the factory has been “substantially completed,” and the company is in the process of “ramping up its manufacturing workforce, ahead of starting high-volume production later this year,” according Jaramillo.

https://www.wvnews.com/news/wvnews/energy-project-to-use-batteries-made-in-west-virginia/article_be5c0a0e-559a-11ef-9d69-2fb32b22b9bc.html

 

FYI Jaramillo was formerly the head of battery production at Tesla.

 

Iron-air batteries: long-duration grid storage targets 1/10th the cost of lithium-ion

The target price tag of $20/kWh (one-tenth the cost of lithium-ion battery storage) can allow wind and solar to deliver firm, stable power cost-competitively with existing fossil generation. Last year, Form Energy (the company commercialising the innovation) took an order from Georgia Power in the U.S. for a 15-megawatt/1,500-megawatt-hour system, and is building a new commercial-scale battery manufacturing facility in West Virginia. Such solutions are essential to the clean energy transition. Halber points at studies that predict that up to 140 TWh of grid storage will be needed globally by 2040.

https://energypost.eu/iron-air-batteries-long-duration-grid-storage-targets-1-10th-the-cost-of-lithium-ion/

 

And this is just one technology. There are lots of others coming online.

 

 

Only if you measure "the turning around" in money spent and elections. If you measure it in greenhouse gas emissions, not so much. More this year than last, and more next year than this. 

CO2.png.b356563fbf92da509bc39f79a7241926.png

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

6 minutes ago, placeholder said:

The turning around is already underway.

Global spending on clean energy technologies and infrastructure on track to hit $2 trillion in 2024 even as higher financing costs hinder new projects, notably in emerging and developing economies

Despite pressures on financing, global investment in clean energy is set to reach almost double the amount going to fossil fuels in 2024, helped by improving supply chains and lower costs for clean technologies, according to a new IEA report.

Total energy investment worldwide is expected to exceed $3 trillion in 2024 for the first time, with some $2 trillion set to go toward clean technologies – including renewables, electric vehicles, nuclear power, grids, storage, low-emissions fuels, efficiency improvements and heat pumps – according to the latest edition of the IEA’s annual World Energy Investment report.

https://www.iea.org/news/investment-in-clean-energy-this-year-is-set-to-be-twice-the-amount-going-to-fossil-fuels

 

Giant batteries drain economics of gas power plants

iant batteries that ensure stable power supply by offsetting intermittent renewable supplies are becoming cheap enough to make developers abandon scores of projects for gas-fired generation world-wide.
The long-term economics of gas-fired plants, used in Europe and some parts of the United States primarily to compensate for the intermittent nature of wind and solar power, are changing quickly, according to Reuters' interviews with more than a dozen power plant developers, project finance bankers, analysts and consultants.

They said some battery operators are already supplying back-up power to grids at a price competitive with gas power plants, meaning gas will be used less.

https://archive.ph/PXJL3

 

And even cheaper batteries are about to go into production:

 

Energy project to use batteries made in West Virginia

Construction of the factory has been “substantially completed,” and the company is in the process of “ramping up its manufacturing workforce, ahead of starting high-volume production later this year,” according Jaramillo.

https://www.wvnews.com/news/wvnews/energy-project-to-use-batteries-made-in-west-virginia/article_be5c0a0e-559a-11ef-9d69-2fb32b22b9bc.html

 

FYI Jaramillo was formerly the head of battery production at Tesla.

 

Iron-air batteries: long-duration grid storage targets 1/10th the cost of lithium-ion

The target price tag of $20/kWh (one-tenth the cost of lithium-ion battery storage) can allow wind and solar to deliver firm, stable power cost-competitively with existing fossil generation. Last year, Form Energy (the company commercialising the innovation) took an order from Georgia Power in the U.S. for a 15-megawatt/1,500-megawatt-hour system, and is building a new commercial-scale battery manufacturing facility in West Virginia. Such solutions are essential to the clean energy transition. Halber points at studies that predict that up to 140 TWh of grid storage will be needed globally by 2040.

https://energypost.eu/iron-air-batteries-long-duration-grid-storage-targets-1-10th-the-cost-of-lithium-ion/

 

And this is just one technology. There are lots of others coming online.

 

 

 

Which turn around is already underway?

 

All that is visible from your posts is that the increased spending is already underway

  • Sad 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

19 minutes ago, Yellowtail said:

Real solutions like what? 

Let the scientist work it out. Have a bit of faith. I remember reading Freakonomics where they used the fact that volcano's cooled the earth so suggested pumping sulphur into the atmosphere. No need to be super idealistic - there is likely someone smart out there who can make a good case for funding - ignoring it is not a solution. 

  • Sad 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.









×
×
  • Create New...
""