A MESSAGE FROM AL GORE

Antarctic glaciers and the global water crisis

02/03/2012 // 11:11 am // 9 Comments //

Today, our journey takes us to Neko Harbor, one of the prime locations in this region to view glaciers. These towering walls of ice are a majestic sight, and a humbling reminder of the fragility of the natural systems that human beings depend upon for life as we know it.

As we began our journey, I wrote about the threats we face as Antarctica’s glaciers melt and the world’s oceans rise. Yet beyond the physical impacts that rising seas pose to coastlines, glaciers are important for many other reasons. We need them in order to preserve one of the basic necessities of life: clean drinking water.

© 2012 Oxfam East Africa/Flickr cc by 2.0

Let’s take a step back. As the global population tops 7 billion, nearly 800 million people do not have access to clean and safe drinking water. The climate crisis could make this problem worse.

As sea levels rise, saltwater can contaminate sources of freshwater near coastal cities and towns. When too much saltwater seeps into lakes, rivers or the soil, the water becomes undrinkable and unusable for agriculture.

Nearly 635 million people – one out of every 10 people in the world today – live in low-lying coastal areas that are susceptible to inundation and disruption of the water supply.

Saltwater intrusion has already affected the Shandong Province in China, and water resources on the Caribbean Islands. In the United States, the water supplies of both San Francisco and New York City could be compromised as sea levels rise and the salty oceans intrude on the drinking water.

Kelly Jaques, National Science Foundation

But the impact of melting glaciers does not end with rising seas. Glaciers also make up the primary water supply in several mountainous parts of the world. In the Andes, shrinking glaciers could impact the water supply for millions of people. The Bolivian cities of La Paz and El Alto depend on glaciers for about a third of their water supply.

From the ice melting in Antarctica, to rising sea levels flooding Bangladesh, to the prospect of a compromised drinking water supply in New York City, the world’s glaciers tie together our greatest challenges of the 21st century. This is a problem that binds all of us together, wherever we live. That’s why it’s incumbent upon all of us to solve the climate crisis.

MORE LIKE THIS: // //

9 Comments

  • Rachael J Sutton

    February 3rd

    Thank you for your integrity and your message.

  • Jennifer Hume

    February 3rd

    To ignore these environmental questions is merely an excuse to indulge our avarice and self interest and is therefore far from civilised.Thank you for your perseverance in the face of adversity from all quarters.

  • Amanda Wilson

    February 3rd

    Thank you for your ongoing perseverence to make a difference. Please know that there are others in the world supporting your efforts in very large ways – with hope that it will spur people into action – not just talk.

  • Jan Moore

    February 4th

    The connection between climate change and the global water crisis is undeniable. While pollution, privatization, population and lack of political will are also important factors regarding it climate change is doing much to change the hydrologic landscape of the world. As you stated salt water intrusion is already happening and places like Florida are also already preparing for it. It is also having an effect in places like Egypt which is also bringing about tension regarding treaties formed years ago regarding the sharing of resources as they become scarcer. This also led to declining agricultural output which led to higher food prices, which also was cited as a reason for the Arab Spring.

    This is also happening between India and China and even here in the U.S where Lake Mead’s water levels have fallen dangerously low which also threatens their source of power, Hoover Dam. In the Himalayas, glacial lakes which are the result of melting glaciers are seen as a great danger as when they burst they carry whole villages with them. Glacial melt is also compromising water supplies in South America as glaciers like Chacaltaya have completely melted.

    Droughts, floods, storms combined with a lack of human caring for this precious resource are culminating in a perfect storm that threatens our present and future. And of course, our oceans are also in danger as well due to acidification. The global water crisis is the moral crisis of our time and goes hand in hand with us working to conserve it and keep it a public trust and human right as well as addressing the anthropogenic carbon pollution adding to the crisis. Ok well, this is an issue close to my heart and I could really go on about it, but I will stop;-).Thanks so much for giving attention to this and connecting the dots. Please know there are others including myself who have been trying to get this message out for years.

  • Keith

    February 5th

    The climate is ever changing and will continue to do so. To deny our own life and simply exist in our own prison to assuage the guilt put onto each of us by propagators of money and control only adds to the sadness we face in what we perceive to be reality.
    It is not possible for the glaciers to melt completely, please don’t fret.

  • Jan

    February 5th

    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/science/science-behind-the-big-freeze-is-climate-change-bringing-the-arctic-to-europe-6358928.html

    Increased Arctic sea ice loss is having an effect on the current frigid extreme weather in Europe.

  • Harquebus

    February 6th

    It would take 4000 years for the ice in Antarctica to melt. The burning of fossil fuels will cease to be a problem long before then.

  • Lajuana raye

    February 7th

    And in addition, to the water supply shortage most drinking water is owned by some corporation. Water is now a commodity. Collectively it is a scary situation. But knowing isn’t enough, how do we make it stop.

    I thank you so much, and all of your crew, for the dedicated research into our global situation. I am obsessed with studying, signing petitions and discussing it with anyone who is half-way interested. But, I want to be able to do more, as I believe many people do they just don’t know exactly what because it seems so big!

  • Diedre Gish

    February 8th

    Thank you for your journal. Please keep reporting the truth.

Leave a Comment

We respect your privacy and won’t share or sell your email address to anyone.

Read our Privacy Policy.

Read our Terms of Use.

Read our Comment Policy.