Berliner Boersenzeitung - How Switzerland's Birch glacier collapsed

EUR -
AED 4.195892
AFN 79.434399
ALL 98.538168
AMD 438.405365
ANG 2.044518
AOA 1048.146254
ARS 1350.886412
AUD 1.758611
AWG 2.057737
AZN 1.938011
BAM 1.962101
BBD 2.305584
BDT 139.539335
BGN 1.959445
BHD 0.430624
BIF 3399.27587
BMD 1.142394
BND 1.472917
BOB 7.89027
BRL 6.433052
BSD 1.142158
BTN 98.056037
BWP 15.338526
BYN 3.736968
BYR 22390.915686
BZD 2.293746
CAD 1.562012
CDF 3272.958099
CHF 0.935666
CLF 0.027876
CLP 1069.732493
CNY 8.230145
CNH 8.202472
COP 4708.683905
CRC 580.759956
CUC 1.142394
CUP 30.273432
CVE 110.620729
CZK 24.821942
DJF 203.343904
DKK 7.458288
DOP 67.425644
DZD 150.356866
EGP 56.738345
ERN 17.135905
ETB 155.939415
FJD 2.567244
FKP 0.84496
GBP 0.841653
GEL 3.129702
GGP 0.84496
GHS 11.706491
GIP 0.84496
GMD 82.251991
GNF 9896.869217
GTQ 8.775257
GYD 238.897189
HKD 8.963329
HNL 29.751674
HRK 7.529058
HTG 149.388435
HUF 403.266075
IDR 18617.989273
ILS 3.980579
IMP 0.84496
INR 98.07261
IQD 1495.910481
IRR 48123.332871
ISK 144.581488
JEP 0.84496
JMD 182.144936
JOD 0.810018
JPY 163.607877
KES 147.586329
KGS 99.901992
KHR 4578.744157
KMF 496.375806
KPW 1028.114845
KRW 1561.469567
KWD 0.349938
KYD 0.951573
KZT 582.786446
LAK 24663.989487
LBP 102330.526207
LKR 341.767545
LRD 227.81559
LSL 20.372001
LTL 3.373191
LVL 0.691023
LYD 6.230007
MAD 10.506432
MDL 19.70964
MGA 5196.642894
MKD 61.482723
MMK 2398.515474
MNT 4084.774613
MOP 9.229783
MRU 45.230649
MUR 52.312045
MVR 17.661745
MWK 1980.041328
MXN 21.924454
MYR 4.851751
MZN 73.010452
NAD 20.371911
NGN 1805.462175
NIO 42.024958
NOK 11.529968
NPR 156.890836
NZD 1.894757
OMR 0.439267
PAB 1.141857
PEN 4.137624
PGK 4.762335
PHP 63.687357
PKR 322.156265
PLN 4.277522
PYG 9124.341642
QAR 4.163388
RON 5.052229
RSD 117.203884
RUB 90.542254
RWF 1615.716964
SAR 4.284709
SBD 9.539863
SCR 16.504358
SDG 686.005072
SEK 10.944971
SGD 1.469644
SHP 0.897742
SLE 25.9549
SLL 23955.424044
SOS 652.601462
SRD 42.437068
STD 23645.242225
SVC 9.991173
SYP 14853.240325
SZL 20.361209
THB 37.234609
TJS 11.304803
TMT 4.00409
TND 3.404333
TOP 2.675601
TRY 44.699693
TTD 7.738784
TWD 34.240397
TZS 3065.275204
UAH 47.335111
UGX 4158.317528
USD 1.142394
UYU 47.613321
UZS 14682.278864
VES 108.352069
VND 29798.19616
VUV 137.748993
WST 3.141023
XAF 658.076091
XAG 0.033114
XAU 0.000338
XCD 3.087376
XDR 0.818853
XOF 658.073202
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.573001
ZAR 20.336664
ZMK 10282.915692
ZMW 29.489444
ZWL 367.850292
  • CMSC

    0.1299

    22.24

    +0.58%

  • CMSD

    0.0812

    22.2325

    +0.37%

  • GSK

    0.4300

    40.9

    +1.05%

  • RIO

    -0.1600

    58.69

    -0.27%

  • BCC

    0.4050

    87.95

    +0.46%

  • SCS

    -0.0600

    10.47

    -0.57%

  • AZN

    1.4100

    73.23

    +1.93%

  • RBGPF

    -1.5000

    67.5

    -2.22%

  • BCE

    0.1000

    22.05

    +0.45%

  • NGG

    0.2400

    71.56

    +0.34%

  • RYCEF

    0.1250

    12.16

    +1.03%

  • BTI

    -0.3020

    46.043

    -0.66%

  • VOD

    -0.0100

    10.295

    -0.1%

  • JRI

    -0.0400

    12.94

    -0.31%

  • RELX

    0.4600

    54.525

    +0.84%

  • BP

    -0.5200

    29.035

    -1.79%

How Switzerland's Birch glacier collapsed
How Switzerland's Birch glacier collapsed / Photo: Fabrice COFFRINI - AFP

How Switzerland's Birch glacier collapsed

A cascade of events in the Swiss Alps led to the dramatic collapse of the Birch glacier, wiping out Blatten village in the valley below, glaciologists and geoscientists told AFP on Friday.

Text size:

Experts knew days ahead of Wednesday's landslide that the glacier was likely to suffer a catastrophic failure. But the reasons why date back much further.

There are strong theories on the causes, and to what degree the disaster is linked to climate change -- but these are yet to be confirmed by scientific analysis.

"This can be considered as a cascading event, because we have different processes involved," explained Christophe Lambiel, senior lecturer at the University of Lausanne's Institute of Earth Surface Dynamics.

- Mountain above the glacier -

The 3,342-metre (10,965-foot) high Kleines Nesthorn mountain above the glacier was already somewhat unstable, and rockfalls accelerated dramatically around 10 days beforehand.

Experts feared a total collapse within hours, but instead there were successive rockfalls over several days, which was actually the best-case scenario.

- Rockfall onto glacier -

Three million cubic metres of rock were deposited on the glacier.

"If you put a lot of weight on an unstable foundation, it can just slip away. And this is what actually happened," Matthias Huss, the director of Glacier Monitoring Switzerland (GLAMOS), told AFP.

"The glacier accelerated strongly in response to this additional loading, and then the disaster struck."

- The Birch glacier -

The Birch glacier was a special case: the only Swiss glacier that was advancing rather than shrinking. However, this was not because of extra snowfall.

Its advance "was quite likely due to the pre-loading with rockfalls from this mountain, which has finally collapsed. So the landslide didn't start from nothing," said Huss.

The glacier was on a steep slope, and even steeper at the front, worsening the dynamics.

Smaller-scale falls from the front of the glacier Tuesday were expected to continue, with Wednesday's sudden total collapse considered a less-probable scenario.

- How the glacier collapsed -

The rockfalls altered the stress equation between the weight of the glacier and the slope, which governs its forward speed, Lambiel told AFP.

Like pushing a car, it takes a lot of force to initiate movement, but less once it is on the move, he explained.

Huss said the 1,000 metres of elevation between the glacier and the Lotschental valley floor added a "huge amount of potential energy", which through friction melts part of the ice, making the fall "much more dynamic than if it was just rock".

- Role of melting permafrost -

Permafrost conditions are degrading throughout the Alps. Ice inside the cracks in the rocks has been thawing to ever-deeper levels over the last decade, especially after the summer 2022 heatwave.

"Ice is considered as the cement of the mountains. Decreasing the quality of the cement decreases the stability of the mountain," said Lambiel.

Huss added: "At the moment, we can't say it's because of permafrost thaw that this mountain collapsed -- but it is at least a very probable explanation, or one factor, that has triggered or accelerated this process of the mountain falling apart."

- Role of climate change -

Jakob Steiner, a geoscientist at the University of Graz in Austria, told AFP: "There is no clear evidence as of yet, for this specific case, that this was caused by climate change."

Huss said making such a direct link was "complicated".

"If it was just because of climate change that this mountain collapsed, all mountains in the Alps could collapse -- and they don't," he said.

"It's a combination of the long-term changes in the geology of the mountain.

"The failing of the glacier as such -- this is not related to climate change. It's more the permafrost processes, which are very complex, long-term changes."

Lambiel said of a link between climate change and the glacier moving forward over time: "Honestly, we don't know.

"But the increasing rockfalls on the glacier during the last 10 years -- this can be linked with climate change."

- Other glaciers -

Modern monitoring techniques detect acceleration in the ice with high precision -- and therefore allow for early warning.

Lambiel said around 80 glaciers in the same region of Switzerland were considered dangerous, and under monitoring.

"The big challenge is to recognise where to direct the detailed monitoring," said Huss.

Lambiel said sites with glacier-permafrost interactions above 3,000 metres would now need more research. But they are difficult to reach and monitor.

Steiner said: "Probably the rapidly changing permafrost can play some kind of role.

"This is concerning because this means that mountains are becoming a lot more unstable."

rjm-burs/phz/jhb

(U.Gruber--BBZ)