NIWA Media Release
Glaciers continue to shrink
New Zealand’s glaciers lost significant ice mass again last summer.
The National Institute of Water & Atmospheric Research (NIWA) has just released the results of its annual end-of-summer survey of the snowline on key
South Island glaciers, showing continued loss of glacier mass.
The survey uses a small fixed wing aircraft to fly over 50 glaciers in the Southern Alps and Kaikoura. Scientists take
photographs and then analyse the images to determine the position of the snowline after the summer melt but before the
first winter snowfall. This provides an index of the mass balance or ’health’ of the glaciers of New Zealand. The survey
has been going since 1977.
NIWA Snow and Ice Scientist Dr Jordy Hendrikx says weather patterns over the course of the year from April 2008 to March
2009 meant that overall the glaciers had lost much more ice than they had gained. This was mainly due to the combination
of above normal temperatures and near normal or below normal rainfall for the Southern Alps during winter, and La
Niña-like patterns producing more northerly flows creating normal-to-above normal temperatures, above normal sunshine,
and well below normal precipitation for the Southern Alps particularly during late summer.
The higher the snowline, the more snow is lost to feed the glacier. On average, the snowline this year was about 95
metres above where it would need to be to keep the ice mass constant. This indicates that the loss of glacier mass
observed in 2007-08 has continued.
When studying and reporting what is happening to glaciers, it is important to look at more than one factor. The position
of the end of summer snowline is only part of the story; in New Zealand, an estimated 90% of ice loss from glaciers
since 1976 is due to down-wasting and lake calving. NIWA’s snowline surveys show an overall decrease in the glacier mass
balance (and thereby volumes) over the past 33 years – but this is punctuated by periods where the prevailing weather
conditions caused the glacier mass balance to increase for a few years.
Similarly, glacier terminus position (the “length” of a glacier) can be misleading when considered on its own because
total volume can be decreasing even while terminus length is increasing.
ENDS
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Background information:
1. Worldwide, glaciers are regarded as a useful indicator of global warming, but New Zealand’s glaciers are more
complicated because they have their source in areas of extremely high precipitation. West of the Main Divide in the
Southern Alps, more than 10 metres (10 000 mm) of precipitation falls each year as clouds are pushed up over the sharply
rising mountain ranges. This means the mass and volume of New Zealand’s glaciers is sensitive to changing wind and
precipitation patterns as well as to temperature. So, for example, the glaciers advanced during most of the 1980s and
1990s when the area experienced about a 15% increase in precipitation, associated with more El Niño events and stronger
westerly winds over New Zealand. The glaciers in parts of Norway are similar.
2. Despite the sensitivity of New Zealand glaciers to changes in both precipitation and temperature, the volume of ice
in the Southern Alps dropped by roughly 50% during the last century. New Zealand’s temperature increased by about 1 °C
over the same period.
3. Globally, most glaciers are retreating. Of the glaciers for which there are continuous data from the World Glacier
Monitoring Service, the mean annual loss in ice thickness since 1980 remains close to half a metre per year. The Service
has said that the loss in ice mass “leaves no doubt about the accelerating change in climatic conditions”. For world
glacier data, see www.geo.unizh.ch/wgms
4. The level of the glacier snowlines is not necessarily closely related to the amount of snow that falls on the
country’s ski fields during winter. Most of the popular ski fields are east of the Main Divide, or in the North Island.
Mount Hutt, for instance, gets its snow from big southeasterlies, whereas most of the glaciers are fed by westerlies.
The melt season is also of critical importance, so while a glacier may receive “normal” snow accumulation, it could be
subject to above normal melt and the net result is a higher snowline and less ice.
5. An estimated 90% of the ice loss from New Zealand glaciers in the Southern Alps since 1976 is due to down-wasting and
lake calving mainly from 12 of the largest glaciers on the eastern side of the main divide. These processes are:
Down-wasting: ice melts from the top surface of the trunk. Trunks go from their original convex shape to near-straight or even
concave (slight hollow in the centre).
Lake calving: ice melting at the foot of glaciers & meltwater forming lakes. Some chunks of ice ‘calve’ off glaciers into the lakes (like ice bergs).