Could Venezuela’s Glacial Disappearance Signal the Future of Climate Change?

Image Credit: Times of India
Venezuela has become the first Andean country to lose all its glaciers, a phenomenon confirmed by recent findings from the International Climate and Cryosphere Initiative (ICCI). This significant environmental loss marks a troubling milestone in the ongoing battle against climate change.
For generations, the glaciated peaks of the Sierra Nevada in the Venezuelan state of Mérida have been a source of regional pride and cultural identity. These majestic mountains, steeped in local legend, were once capped by six glaciers. Today, none remain.
The ICCI, a science advocacy organization, recently declared that the Humboldt Glacier, also known as La Corona or “the crown” in Spanish, is now too small to be classified as a glacier. Venezuelan scientists had already warned in March that the glacier had dramatically shrunk. “Our tropical glaciers began to disappear in the ’70s, and their absence is deeply felt. It is a great sadness, and the only thing we can do now is use their legacy to show children how beautiful our Sierra Nevada once was,” said Alejandra Melfo, an astrophysicist at the Universidad de los Andes in Mérida.
Located about 16,000 feet above sea level, the Sierra Nevada of Venezuela was home to six glaciers. By 2011, five had vanished, leaving only the Humboldt Glacier, near the country’s second-highest peak, Humboldt Peak. Scientists now confirm that its disappearance makes Venezuela the first nation in modern history to lose all its glaciers.
Glaciers, large masses of ice formed by centuries of snow accumulation, require near-freezing average annual temperatures and significant winter precipitation to maintain their size. The Humboldt Glacier failed to retain the necessary conditions, leading to its eventual disappearance.
Discoveries and Advancements
With rising global temperatures driven by climate change, the melting of large ice masses is a continuous process, contributing to rising sea levels worldwide. “It is the end of a glacial cycle. In the intertropical zones below 5,000 meters, almost all glaciers have been disappearing,” said Maximiliano Bezada, a geological researcher at the University of Minnesota. The Humboldt Glacier, situated at 4,800 meters, was an anomaly for lasting as long as it did. Venezuelan scientists were hindered in their efforts to monitor the glacier due to political instability. Melfo recalls witnessing the gradual disappearance of glaciers at Pico La Concha and Pico Bolívar, underscoring the severity of Venezuela’s glacial loss.
Environmental Protection Initiatives
Glaciers globally are retreating faster than scientific models had predicted. A 2023 study of the world’s 215,000 terrestrial glaciers concluded that if current temperature trends continue, 83% of these glaciers will disappear by 2100. Bezada emphasized that global warming, exacerbated by greenhouse gases, has accelerated this process.
From 1952 to 2019, Venezuela’s glacier surface area plummeted from 2,317 square kilometers to a mere 0.046 square kilometers. Temperature sensors in the Sierra Nevada have recorded a rise in ground temperatures, further evidencing climate change’s impact. El Niño, a climate phenomenon, also played a role in hastening the Humboldt Glacier’s demise.
Exploration and Future Research
The melting of the Humboldt Glacier marks the start of a new ecological process. “Life starts to rise and colonize the rock. This process of primary succession is a unique event that will require extensive study,” Melfo explained. Despite the loss, the remaining ice on Humboldt will continue to melt, and for the people of Mérida, the glacier will exist in memory as long as its white vestiges are visible. “Until the last piece disappears, we will continue saying that it is a glacier,” Melfo concluded.
This profound environmental change highlights the urgent need for continued research and action against climate change to preserve what remains of our planet’s glaciers and the ecosystems they support.
This story was originally featured on NBC News