How many glaciers in Canada’s Arctic can be saved from extinction?
Thousands of glaciers across Canada could be saved from total extinction by the end of the century if humanity can bend the curve on global warming, a new global study suggested while offering a grim outlook on one of the world’s icons of changing climate.
The study published Monday in the peer-reviewed journal Nature Climate Change estimates almost 80 per cent of glaciers worldwide are set to vanish by 2100 at the planet’s current warming trajectory of around 2.7 degrees above pre-industrial average. That drops to 63 per cent at two degrees, or about 34,000 fewer glaciers wiped out completely.
The paper introduced the term “peak glacier extinction” to describe the year when the largest numbers of glaciers are expected to disappear between now and the end of the century.
At 1.5 degrees of warming, about 2,000 glaciers disappear every year peaking around 2041. At four degrees, the peak shifts to the mid-2050s and intensifies to around 4,000 glaciers per year as global warming melts away larger glaciers.


