Overall, there is a large net melting of the ice in Greenland as a result of global warming, which is hitting harder here than in other regions of the world. But the picture is very complex and varied, he says:
“There are areas in East Greenland where more precipitation in the form of snow has balanced the ice mass loss, so that it is not nearly as large as in northern Greenland. Areas in East Greenland with mountains of over 2,000 metres have had increased precipitation in high-altitude areas,” says William Colgan.
However, this is offset by the proportionally very heavy melting from the peripheral glaciers in North Greenland in particular. Together, they now lose four times as much mass annually as in 2003, the new study shows.
The work is part of the continuos effort lead by GEUS monitoring the over all response to global climate change from the Arctic ice covers and consequential sea level rise.