Showing posts with label Argentina. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Argentina. Show all posts

Saturday, July 12, 2025

‘It can’t withstand the heat’: fears ‘stable’ Patagonia glacier in irreversible decline. Scientists say Perito Moreno, which for decades defied trend of glacial retreat, now rapidly losing mass

 

The Perito Moreno glacier has lost 1.92 sq km of ice cover in the past seven years. Photograph: Walter Diaz/AFP/Getty Images

  

 by María de los Ángeles Orfila

 

One of the few stable glaciers in a warming world, Perito Moreno, in Santa Cruz province, Argentina, is now undergoing a possibly irreversible retreat, scientists say.

Over the past seven years, it has lost 1.92 sq km (0.74 sq miles) of ice cover and its thickness is decreasing by up to 8 metres (26 ft) a year.

For decades, Perito Moreno defied the global trend of glacial retreat, maintaining an exceptional balance between snow accumulation and melting. Its dramatic calving events, when massive blocks of ice crashed into Lago Argentino, became a symbol of natural wonder, drawing millions of visitors to southern Patagonia.

Dr Lucas Ruiz, a glaciologist at the Argentine Institute of Nivology, Glaciology and Environmental Sciences, said: “The Perito Moreno is a very particular, exceptional glacier. Since records began, it stood out to the first explorers in the late 19th century because it showed no signs of retreat – on the contrary, it was advancing. And it continued to do so until 2018, when we began to see a different behaviour. Since then, its mass loss has become increasingly rapid.”

Scientists and local guides warn that the balance is beginning to shift. “The first year the glacier didn’t return to its previous year’s position was 2022. The same happened in 2023, again in 2024, and now in 2025. The truth is, the retreat continues. The glacier keeps thinning, especially along its northern margin,” said Ruiz. This sector is the farthest from tourist walkways and lies above the deepest part of Lago Argentino, the largest freshwater lake in Argentina.

Calving events at Perito Moreno, when ice collapses into the lake, are becoming louder, more frequent, and much larger. Photograph: Philipp Rohner/Getty Images/500px

The summer of 2023-24 recorded a maximum temperature of 11.2C, according to meteorological data collected by Pedro Skvarca, a geophysical engineer and the scientific director of the Glaciarium centre in El Calafate, Patagonia. Over the past 30 years, the average summer temperature rose by 1.2C, a change significant enough to greatly accelerate ice melt.

Ice thickness measurements are equally alarming. Between 2018 and 2022, the glacier was thinning at a rate of 4 metres a year. But in the past two years, that has doubled to 8 metres annually.

“Perito Moreno’s size no longer matches the current climate; it’s simply too big. It can’t withstand the heat, and the current ice input isn’t enough to compensate,” Ruiz said.

Ice that once rested on the lakebed owing to its weight, said Ruiz, had now thinned so much that it was beginning to float, as water pressure overtook the ice’s own.

With that anchor lost, the glacier’s front accelerates – not because of increased mass input from the accumulation zone, where snow compacts into ice, but because the front slides and deforms. This movement triggers a feedback loop that further weakens the structure, making the process potentially irreversible.

Xabier Blanch Gorriz, a professor in the department of civil and environmental engineering at the Polytechnic University of Catalonia, who studies ice calving at the Perito Moreno glacier front, said: “Describing the change as ‘irreversible’ is complex, because glaciers are dynamic systems. But the truth is that the current rate of retreat points to a clearly negative trend.” He added: “The glacier’s retreat and thinning are evident and have accelerated.”

Ruiz confirmed another disturbing trend reported by local guides: calving events are becoming louder, more frequent, and much larger. In April, a guide at Los Glaciares national park described watching a tower of ice the height of a 20-storey building collapse into the lake. “It’s only in the last four to six years that we’ve started seeing icebergs this size,” he told Reuters.

In January of this year, Blanch Gorriz and his team installed eight photogrammetric systems that capture images every 30 minutes, enabling the generation of 3D models of about 300 metres of the glacier front. Initial comparisons between December and June already reveal significant ice loss. Satellite images further highlight a striking retreat over just 100 days.

Today, nothing seems capable of halting the glacier’s retreat. Only a series of cooler summers and wetter winters might slow the trend, but climate projections point in the opposite direction.

“What we expect is that, at some point, Perito Moreno will lose contact with the Magallanes peninsula, which has historically acted as a stabilising buttress and slowed the glacier’s response to climate change. When that happens, we’ll likely see a catastrophic retreat to a new equilibrium position, farther back in the narrow valley,” said Ruiz.

Such a shift would represent a “new configuration” of the glacier, raising scientific questions about how this natural wonder would behave in the future. “It will be something never seen before – even farther back than what the first researchers documented in the late 19th century,” Ruiz nadded.

How long the glacier might hold that future position remains unknown. But what scientists do know is that the valley, unlike the Magallanes peninsula, would not be able to hold the glacier in place.

Perito Moreno – Latin America’s most iconic glacier and part of a Unesco world heritage site since 1981 – now joins a regrettable local trend: its neighbours, the Upsala and Viedma glaciers, have retreated at an astonishing rate over the past two decades. It is also part of a global pattern in which, as Ruiz put it, humanity is “digging the grave” of the world’s glaciers.


 

Monday, March 10, 2025

Argentina flooding: 16 killed as two girls swept away by rising waters. Authorities warn more fatalities expected as a year’s worth of rain falls on Bahía Blanca in eight hours

Firefighters and volunteers help people out of flooded areas in Bahía Blanca, Argentina, on 8 March 2025. Photograph: Pablo Presti/EPA

 

in Buenos Aires
 


 

Rescue teams in Argentina are searching for two girls, aged one and five, who were swept away by severe floods that ripped through Buenos Aires province, killing at least 16 people.

A year’s worth of rain fell on the city of Bahía Blanca and the town of Cerri on Friday, rapidly inundating neighbourhoods and destroying homes, bridges and roads. The rainfall – 400mm (15.7in) recorded in just eight hours – was more than twice the city’s previous record of 175mm (6.8in) set in 1930.

The sisters, Delfina and Pilar Hecker, were travelling with their parents when their car became trapped in the rising waters. According to reports, a truck driver, named as Rubén Zalazar, attempted to rescue the children before they were swept away. The body of 43-year-0ld Zalazar was found in a lagoon on Sunday.

 

At least 16 people have been declared dead by officials, with authorities saying there are “likely to be more”. In the latest press conference, Carlos Bianco, a minister in the Buenos Aires province, said at least 100 people were missing.

Authorities also said more than 1,000 people were evacuated over the weekend, while estimates suggest hundreds have been made homeless. Videos posted online showed neonatal nurses wading through knee-deep flood waters to rescue newborn babies.

“We looked at the street and saw a river. We saw cars, trucks, containers, everything floating by. You could hear store windows breaking, and see furniture being dragged by the current,” said Soledad Bengochea, 52, a resident. “In one car, we saw two people trapped. It was overwhelming and terrible. There are many people who have suffered.”

The national security minister, Patricia Bullrich, said the area had been “destroyed”, while Argentina’s president, Javier Milei, declared three days of national mourning.

But the government has also come under fire after it emerged the national emergency directorate – which provides disaster relief – was shuttered three days before the storm, with 485 employees dismissed or placed on leave. The decision comes as Milei’s administration conducts widespread cuts to state spending

The mayor, Federico Susbielles, said that the floods had caused millions in infrastructure damage. Agostina Bitti, a 34-year-old doctor, said there are “still houses under water”. “The entire city needs to be rebuilt,” she said.

Argentina’s economy ministry has pledged AR$10bn (US$9.2m at the official exchange rate) to help repair the damage and rebuild the city.

The Argentinian footballer Lionel Messi offered his condolences to the victims’ families, saying he wished them strength. Pope Francis, who has been hospitalised in Rome since 14 February, also sent a message to the victims. The Vatican press office said that the pontiff, who is also from Argentina, is holding those affected in his “thoughts and prayers”.

Extreme rainfall has become more common and more intense due to human-caused climate breakdown across most of the world, because warmer air can hold more water vapour.

 

Thursday, December 24, 2009

Argentina Plans to Mandate 3% Ethanol Blend Next Year


NEW YORK (DTN) -- Argentina will begin blending 3 percent ethanol into gasoline used for transportation starting Jan. 1, according to Roberto Salafia, a commercial attache at the country's embassy in Washington, D.C.
The details of the plan were not immediately available, but Salafia confirmed reports that his country plans on imposing a blending requirement for both gasoline and diesel.
He said Argentina already exports biodiesel, so the requirement for mandatory use of biodiesel won't be a problem.
According to reports, Julio De Vido, a key energy adviser to Argentinean President Cristina Fernadez de Kirchner, on Monday announced the rollout of the 3 percent ethanol blend, which has been discussed for a while. The mandate is part of an effort to diversify energy sources.
Argentina joins Jamaica in recently mandating biofuels, with Jamaica imposing a 10 percent ethanol blend requirement in November. Meanwhile, last week, China lowered import tariffs on biofuels.
George Orwel can be reached at george.orwel@dtn.com

Argentina Plans to Mandate 3% Ethanol Blend Next Year


NEW YORK (DTN) -- Argentina will begin blending 3 percent ethanol into gasoline used for transportation starting Jan. 1, according to Roberto Salafia, a commercial attache at the country's embassy in Washington, D.C.
The details of the plan were not immediately available, but Salafia confirmed reports that his country plans on imposing a blending requirement for both gasoline and diesel.
He said Argentina already exports biodiesel, so the requirement for mandatory use of biodiesel won't be a problem.
According to reports, Julio De Vido, a key energy adviser to Argentinean President Cristina Fernadez de Kirchner, on Monday announced the rollout of the 3 percent ethanol blend, which has been discussed for a while. The mandate is part of an effort to diversify energy sources.
Argentina joins Jamaica in recently mandating biofuels, with Jamaica imposing a 10 percent ethanol blend requirement in November. Meanwhile, last week, China lowered import tariffs on biofuels.
George Orwel can be reached at george.orwel@dtn.com

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

EBB monitoring biodiesel imports from Argentina


The European Biodiesel Board has an ongoing dialogue with the European Commission so it can “react quickly” to any evidence it gathers regarding the U.S. colluding with Argentina to circumvent countervailing measures imposed against the states, said Amandine Lacourt of the EBB. “The situation is currently under investigation,” she told Biodiesel Magazine. “A lot of biodiesel already flows from Argentina to Europe and we have noticed an increase in the volumes, so it might be easier for some fraudulent practices to occur.”

Argentina has a tax system that promotes the processing of soy beans: the tax on raw soybeans is 35 percent; soy oil is 32 percent and soy methyl esters is 20 percent. “So there definitely is an incentive to produce and export biodiesel,” Lacourt says. “With other incentives the tax is even lower, and we think that it is creating distortions in the market. We do know, however, that it is not illegal under WTO rules.”

Of course, this system is entirely different than the U.S. blenders credit, which the EC concluded allowed American producers to sell biodiesel in Europe below cost. This initiated the EC to enact “countervailing measures” to make the competition fair. European parties are concerned however that Argentina and U.S. producers could conspire to circumvent the anti-dumping laws by essentially taking advantage of incentives in both countries, and then selling it in Europe at low cost and high profit.

EBB monitoring biodiesel imports from Argentina


The European Biodiesel Board has an ongoing dialogue with the European Commission so it can “react quickly” to any evidence it gathers regarding the U.S. colluding with Argentina to circumvent countervailing measures imposed against the states, said Amandine Lacourt of the EBB. “The situation is currently under investigation,” she told Biodiesel Magazine. “A lot of biodiesel already flows from Argentina to Europe and we have noticed an increase in the volumes, so it might be easier for some fraudulent practices to occur.”

Argentina has a tax system that promotes the processing of soy beans: the tax on raw soybeans is 35 percent; soy oil is 32 percent and soy methyl esters is 20 percent. “So there definitely is an incentive to produce and export biodiesel,” Lacourt says. “With other incentives the tax is even lower, and we think that it is creating distortions in the market. We do know, however, that it is not illegal under WTO rules.”

Of course, this system is entirely different than the U.S. blenders credit, which the EC concluded allowed American producers to sell biodiesel in Europe below cost. This initiated the EC to enact “countervailing measures” to make the competition fair. European parties are concerned however that Argentina and U.S. producers could conspire to circumvent the anti-dumping laws by essentially taking advantage of incentives in both countries, and then selling it in Europe at low cost and high profit.

Summer 2025 was hottest on record in UK, says Met Office. Unprecedented average temperature made about 70 times more likely by human-induced climate change, says agency

The water levels at Broomhead reservoir in South Yorkshire have been low this summer. Photograph: Richard McCarthy/PA by   Damien Gayle The...