Tuesday, September 02, 2025

Once king of the seas, a giant iceberg is finally breaking up


By AFP
September 2, 2025


The world's largest iceberg is breaking up - Copyright AFP Valentin RAKOVSKY, Valentina BRESCHI

Nearly 40 years after breaking off Antarctica, a colossal iceberg ranked among the oldest and largest ever recorded is finally crumbling apart in warmer waters, and could disappear within weeks.

Earlier this year, the “megaberg” known as A23a weighed a little under a trillion tonnes and was more than twice the size of Greater London, a behemoth unrivalled at the time.

The gigantic slab of frozen freshwater was so large it even briefly threatened penguin feeding grounds on a remote island in the South Atlantic Ocean, but ended up moving on.

It is now less than half its original size, but still a hefty 1,770 square kilometres (683 square miles) and 60 kilometres (37 miles) at its widest point, according to AFP analysis of satellite images by the EU earth observation monitor Copernicus.

In recent weeks, enormous chunks — some 400 square kilometres in their own right — have broken off while smaller chips, many still large enough to threaten ships, litter the sea around it.

It was “breaking up fairly dramatically” as it drifted further north, Andrew Meijers, a physical oceanographer from the British Antarctic Survey, told AFP.

“I’d say it’s very much on its way out… it’s basically rotting underneath. The water is way too warm for it to maintain. It’s constantly melting,” he said.

“I expect that to continue in the coming weeks, and expect it won’t be really identifiable within a few weeks.”

– ‘Doomed’ –

A23a calved from the Antarctic shelf in 1986 but quickly grounded in the Weddell Sea, remaining stuck on the ocean floor for over 30 years.

It finally escaped in 2020 and, like other giants before it, was carried along “iceberg alley” into the South Atlantic Ocean by the powerful Antarctic Circumpolar Current.

Around March, it ran aground in shallow waters off distant South Georgia island, raising fears it could disrupt large colonies of adult penguins and seals there from feeding their young.

But it dislodged in late May, and moved on.

Swinging around the island and tracking north, in recent weeks the iceberg has picked up speed, sometimes travelling up to 20 kilometres in a single day, satellite images analysed by AFP showed.

Exposed to increasingly warmer waters, and buffeted by huge waves, A23a has rapidly disintegrated.

Scientists were “surprised” how long the iceberg had kept together, said Meijers.

“Most icebergs don’t make it this far. This one’s really big so it has lasted longer and gone further than others.”

But ultimately, icebergs are “doomed” once they leave the freezing protection of Antarctica, he added.

Iceberg calving is a natural process. But scientists say the rate at which they were being lost from Antarctica is increasing, probably because of human induced climate change.
South Australia bans plastic fish-shaped soy sauce containers


By AFP
September 2, 2025


Plastic fish-shaped soy sauce containers will be banned in South Australia as part of a state crackdown on single-use plastic - Copyright AFP Nhac NGUYEN

An Australian state has banned plastic fish-shaped soy sauce containers, reeling in a sushi lovers’ favourite that is washing up in drains and beaches.

South Australia is the first state in the country to cast a net over the pervasive piscine plastic, known as shoyu-tai.

Invented in Japan in the 1950s, they have become a popular way for diners to season their takeaway sushi.

But the fishy delights are too small to be captured by sorting machinery and often end up in landfills or as fugitive plastic, South Australia’s Environment Minister Susan Close said.

“Single-use plastics are often used for seconds but they last a lifetime in our natural environment,” she said.

“The small size of the fish-shaped soy containers means they’re easily dropped, blown away, or washed into drains, making them a frequent component of beach and street litter.”

South Australia is the first state in the country to ban the plastic soy fish, joining single-use cutlery, bags, coffee cups and takeaway containers on the list of prohibited items.

Manufacturer Asahi Sogyo makes a variety of other novelty soy-sauce containers — originally known as lucky charms — including small pigs and tiny bottles, according to the company’s website.

The factory produces around a million “lucky charms” each day.

The South Australian government said restaurants will need to use alternative soy sauce carriers like sachets, squeezable packs, refillable or compostable containers.

Japanese restaurant owner Abby Zhang said the ban was a “positive step forward”.

“We made a significant change a while back by switching from soy sauce fish containers to more sustainable alternatives, such as compostable sauce containers,” Zhang said in a statement, adding customers were “incredibly supportive”.

More than 400 million tonnes of plastic are produced globally each year, half of which is for single-use items.

While 15 percent of plastic waste is collected for recycling, only nine percent is actually recycled.

 

Global map shows where ocean plastics pose greatest threats



Tulane University






As plastic pollution emerges as one of the planet’s most pressing environmental threats, Tulane University scientists have published the first global assessment of where plastics pose the greatest ecological risks to marine ecosystems. 

The effort revealed that highest-risk areas aren’t always the “garbage patches” where plastics visibly pile up but often places where plastics overlap with dense marine life and pollutants. That means even waters with relatively modest plastic levels can face severe ecological threats.

The study, published in Nature Sustainability, goes beyond measuring where plastics accumulate. Instead, it maps worldwide “ecological risk hotspots” by evaluating four major pathways of harm for marine life: ingestion, entanglement, transport of toxic pollutants and the leaching of harmful chemicals as plastics break down.

“Plastic pollution in the ocean is widely recognized as a global concern, but the ecological risks it poses remain poorly understood,” said lead study author Yanxu Zhang, associate professor of Earth and Environmental Sciences at Tulane School of Science and Engineering. “We wanted to fill this knowledge gap by systematically assessing how plastics interact with marine life and ecosystems through multiple risk pathways.”

The team used newly developed computational methods to evaluate risk. By integrating global models of ocean plastics, marine species distribution and pollutant levels, they created a comprehensive new framework for assessing ecological threats.

The findings highlight the need to prioritize cleanup and prevention not only in areas with visible plastic accumulation but also in regions where marine life is most vulnerable, Zhang said.

High-risk zones include the mid-latitude North Pacific and North Atlantic oceans, parts of the North Indian Ocean and coastal East Asia. Nutrient-rich waters with abundant marine life drive risk in some cases, even when plastic levels are not the highest. Coastal areas near busy fishing grounds are particularly vulnerable to entanglement hazards from “ghost gear,” the term for abandoned fishing gear in the water, such as gillnets, traps, fishing lines and trawl nets.

The study also identified plastics’ role as a “conveyor belt” for pollutants such as the neurotoxic methylmercury and so-called “forever chemicals” (PFOS), two contaminants that can build up in marine food webs and threaten human health. Elevated risks occur in regions where contaminated plastics are most likely to be ingested by marine organisms.

Looking ahead, the researchers modeled future scenarios based on different levels of plastic waste reduction. Without stronger global action, ingestion risk could increase more than threefold by 2060. But coordinated efforts to reduce plastic use and improve waste management — especially in rapidly developing regions — could substantially lessen the threats.

“By mapping the global distribution of plastic-related ecological risks, we provide a scientific foundation to guide ocean cleanup priorities and policymaking,” Zhang said. “This work comes at a crucial moment, as the world is negotiating a global plastic treaty, and we hope our results can help target interventions where they will have the greatest impact.”

Collaborators include scientists from Nanjing University and South China University of Technology (China), the Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California San Diego (US), Concordia University (Canada) and the Institute of Geological and Nuclear Sciences (New Zealand).

 

No-sort plastic recycling is near



New catalyst could make mixed plastic recycling a reality



Northwestern University





The future of plastic recycling may soon get much less complicated, frustrating and tedious.

In a new study, Northwestern University chemists have introduced a new plastic upcycling process that can drastically reduce — or perhaps even fully bypass — the laborious chore of pre-sorting mixed plastic waste.

The process harnesses a new, inexpensive nickel-based catalyst that selectively breaks down polyolefin plastics consisting of polyethylenes and polypropylenes — the single-use kind that dominates nearly two-thirds of global plastic consumption. This means industrial users could apply the catalyst to large volumes of unsorted polyolefin waste.

When the catalyst breaks down polyolefins, the low-value solid plastics transform into liquid oils and waxes, which can be upcycled into higher-value products, including lubricants, fuels and candles. Not only can it be used multiple times, but the new catalyst can also break down plastics contaminated with polyvinyl chloride (PVC), a toxic polymer that notoriously makes plastics “unrecyclable.”

The study will be published on Tuesday (Sept. 2) in the journal Nature Chemistry.

“One of the biggest hurdles in plastic recycling has always been the necessity of meticulously sorting plastic waste by type,” said Northwestern’s Tobin Marks, the study’s senior author. “Our new catalyst could bypass this costly and labor-intensive step for common polyolefin plastics, making recycling more efficient, practical and economically viable than current strategies.”

“When people think of plastic, they likely are thinking about polyolefins,” said Northwestern’s Yosi Kratish, a co-corresponding author on the paper. “Basically, almost everything in your refrigerator is polyolefin based — squeeze bottles for condiments and salad dressings, milk jugs, plastic wrap, trash bags, disposable utensils, juice cartons and much more. These plastics have a very short lifetime, so they are mostly single-use. If we don’t have an efficient way to recycle them, then they end up in landfills and in the environment, where they linger for decades before degrading into harmful microplastics.”

A world-renowned catalysis expert, Marks is the Vladimir N. Ipatieff Professor of Catalytic Chemistry at Northwestern’s Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences and a professor of chemical and biological engineering at Northwestern’s McCormick School of Engineering. He is also a faculty affiliate at the Paula M. Trienens Institute for Sustainability and Energy. Kratish is a research assistant professor in Marks’ group, and an affiliated faculty member at the Trienens Institute. Qingheng Lai, a research associate in Marks’ group, is the study’s first author. Marks, Kratish and Lai co-led the study with Jeffrey Miller, a professor of chemical engineering at Purdue University; Michael Wasielewski, Clare Hamilton Hall Professor of Chemistry at Weinberg; and Takeshi Kobayashi a research scientist at Ames National Laboratory.

The polyolefin predicament

From yogurt cups and snack wrappers to shampoo bottles and medical masks, most people interact with polyolefin plastics multiple times throughout the day. Because of its versatility, polyolefins are the most used plastic in the world. By some estimates, industry produces more than 220 million tons of polyolefin products globally each year. Yet, according to a 2023 report in the journal Nature, recycling rates for polyolefin plastics are alarmingly low, ranging from less than 1% to 10% worldwide.

The main reason for this disappointing recycling rate is polyolefin’s sturdy, stubborn composition. It contains small molecules linked together with carbon-carbon bonds, which are famously difficult to break.

“When we design catalysts, we target weak spots,” Kratish said. “But polyolefins don’t have any weak links. Every bond is incredibly strong and chemically unreactive.” 

Problems with current processes

Currently, only a few, less-than-ideal processes exist that can recycle polyolefin. It can be shredded into flakes, which are then melted and downcycled to form low-quality plastic pellets. But because different types of plastics have different properties and melting points, the process requires workers to scrupulously separate various types of plastics. Even small amounts of other plastics, food residue or non-plastic materials can compromise an entire batch. And those compromised batches go straight into the landfill.

Another option involves heating plastics to incredibly high temperatures, reaching 400 to 700 degrees Celsius. Although this process degrades polyolefin plastics into a useful mixture of gases and liquids, it’s extremely energy intensive.

“Everything can be burned, of course,” Kratish said. “If you apply enough energy, you can convert anything to carbon dioxide and water. But we wanted to find an elegant way to add the minimum amount of energy to derive the maximum value product.”

Precision engineering

To uncover that elegant solution, Marks, Kratish and their team looked to hydrogenolysis, a process that uses hydrogen gas and a catalyst to break down polyolefin plastics into smaller, useful hydrocarbons. While hydrogenolysis approaches already exist, they typically require extremely high temperatures and expensive catalysts made from noble metals like platinum and palladium.

“The polyolefin production scale is huge, but the global noble metal reserves are very limited,” Lai said. “We cannot use the entire metal supply for chemistry. And, even if we did, there still would not be enough to address the plastic problem. That’s why we’re interested in Earth-abundant metals.”

For its polyolefin recycling catalyst, the Northwestern team pinpointed cationic nickel, which is synthesized from an abundant, inexpensive and commercially available nickel compound. While other nickel nanoparticle-based catalysts have multiple reaction sites, the team designed a single-site molecular catalyst. 

The single-site design enables the catalyst to act like a highly specialized scalpel — preferentially cutting carbon-carbon bonds — rather than a less controlled blunt instrument that indiscriminately breaks down the plastic’s entire structure. As a result, the catalyst allows for the selective breakdown of branched polyolefins (such as isotactic polypropylene) when they are mixed with unbranched polyolefins — effectively separating them chemically.

“Compared to other nickel-based catalysts, our process uses a single-site catalyst that operates at a temperature 100 degrees lower and at half the hydrogen gas pressure,” Kratish said. “We also use 10 times less catalyst loading, and our activity is 10 times greater. So, we are winning across all categories.”

Accelerated by contamination

With its single, precisely defined and isolated active site, the nickel-based catalyst possesses unprecedented activity and stability. The catalyst is so thermally and chemically stable, in fact, that it maintains control even when exposed to contaminants like PVC. Used in pipes, flooring and medical devices, PVC is visually similar to other types of plastics but significantly less stable upon heating. Upon decomposition, PVC releases hydrogen chloride gas, a highly corrosive byproduct that typically deactivates catalysts and disrupts the recycling process.

Amazingly, not only did Northwestern’s catalyst withstand PVC contamination, PVC actually accelerated its activity. Even when the total weight of the waste mixture is made up of 25% PVC, the scientists found their catalyst still worked with improved performance. This unexpected result suggests the team’s method might overcome one of the biggest hurdles in mixed plastic recycling — breaking down waste currently deemed “unrecyclable” due to PVC contamination. The catalyst also can be regenerated over multiple cycles through a simple treatment with inexpensive alkylaluminium.

“Adding PVC to a recycling mixture has always been forbidden,” Kratish said. “But apparently, it makes our process even better. That is crazy. It’s definitely not something anybody expected.”

The study, “Stable single-site organo-Ni catalyst preferentially hydrogenolyzes branched polyolefin C-C bonds,” was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy (award number DE-SC0024448) and The Dow Chemical Company.

 

New research shows changing winters will hit northern lakes the hardest



University of Minnesota
Lake Superior 

image: 

University of Minnesota Duluth researchers collecting samples from frozen Lake Superior

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Credit: Ted Ozersky





Duluth, MN - In the world’s cold and snowy regions, shorter and warmer winters are one of the most conspicuous consequences of climate change. For freshwater lakes, this means later freezing, earlier thawing, and thinner ice. A new study, published in Ecology Letters, shows that the ecological impacts of these winter changes may be most dramatic in high-latitude lakes.

“The ecology of ice-covered lakes is a bit of a black box for lake scientists,” said Ted Ozersky, a University of Minnesota Duluth biologist who led the research. “For a long time, we assumed that nothing interesting happened under the ice, so few studies looked at what goes on in frozen lakes.” But as ice cover declines, the winter ecology of lakes is gaining attention—and urgency. A key question scientists are now asking is: how will lakes respond to shorter, warmer winters and less ice?

The new paper, authored by researchers from the United States, Norway and Canada, shows that changes in winter ice and snow conditions will have the greatest ecological impact on Arctic lakes, followed by those in boreal and temperate areas. The reason lies in a previously unrecognized interaction between the timing of incoming solar radiation and the seasonality of ice cover.

At high latitudes, a larger share of the sun’s annual light arrives while lakes are still frozen. For example, at 75°N, more than half the year’s solar energy reaches the Earth’s surface during the lake ice-covered period. At 45°N, that figure is closer to 25 percent. As a result, even small changes in the duration or transparency of lake ice can dramatically alter how much light reaches the water column at high latitudes.

“Here in northern Norway and in other Arctic regions, many lakes are still frozen well-into the midnight sun period, experiencing 24-hours of daylight,” said co-author Amanda Poste of the Norwegian Institute for Nature Research. “In these Arctic lakes, under-ice production can contribute substantially to lake food webs, which could be threatened by predicted increases in snow cover in some regions. On the other hand, loss of ice during a period with around-the-clock daylight could lead to increased open water productivity.”

The team combined models of incoming sunlight with realistic snow and ice cover scenarios across a range of latitudes. They also explored how light interacts with temperature in lakes at different latitudes. Because light and temperature are key drivers of biological productivity, understanding how these factors are changing is essential for predicting shifts in lake food webs and ecosystem functioning.

Key findings from the study include:

  • Light availability in high-latitude lakes is far more sensitive to changes in ice and snow conditions than in temperate lakes.

  • Climate change is increasing the seasonal overlap of light and warmth, especially at high latitudes, thus enhancing the potential for plant growth and animal activity.

  • As a result, high-latitude lakes may undergo more dramatic ecological shifts, including changes in productivity, food web dynamics and the timing of biological events.

The paper offers a new framework for understanding how climate change will affect lake ecosystems and lays out testable predictions for future research.

“Many researchers who are starting to study frozen lakes focus on just one region,” said Ozersky. “Our collaboration includes researchers working on lakes in very different locations, from Minnesota to boreal Québec to the high Arctic. By working together we were able to identify this interesting large-scale pattern.”

The study underscores that winter plays a key role in shaping lake ecosystems, and that changes that happen during the ice cover period can have powerful and lasting effects, especially in northern lakes. The authors are now working with dozens of research groups around the world to collect standardized observations from diverse ice-covered lakes to test and refine the model’s predictions.

The Ecology Letters paper, titled “Impacts of Changing Winters on Lake Ecosystems will Increase with Latitude”, was co-authored by Ted Ozersky (University of Minnesota Duluth), Amanda Poste (Norwegian Institute for Nature Research), Milla Rautio (Université du Québec à Chicoutimi), and Eva Leu (Akvaplan-NIVA).

The tipping of the last resilient glaciers



When the Soviet Union’s collapse meant no glacier data for decades in Tajikistan



Institute of Science and Technology Austria

Researchers' base camp in central Tajikistan 

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Researchers’ headquarters. Base camp north of Maidakul Lake, close to Kyzylsu Glacier, during the first field visit in June 2021. Northwestern Pamir mountains, central Tajikistan.

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Credit: © Marin Kneib/ISTA





Too little snowfall is now also shaking the foundations of some of the world’s most resilient 'water towers', a new study led by the Pellicciotti group at the Institute of Science and Technology Austria (ISTA) shows. After establishing a monitoring network on a new benchmark glacier in central Tajikistan, the international team of researchers was able to model the entire catchment’s behavior from 1999 to 2023. The results, showing decreasing glacier health, were published in Communications Earth & Environment.

High-mountain Asia has been nicknamed the Third Pole due to its massive meltwater reserves, which are second only to the Arctic and Antarctic polar caps. In Central Asia, the northwestern Pamir Mountains in Tajikistan have been home to some of the last stable or growing glaciers outside the polar regions. However, between the collapse of the Soviet Union and the return of new monitoring networks, this region has also suffered from a dire lack of observational data for decades.

Researchers from Professor Francesca Pellicciotti’s group at the Institute of Science and Technology Austria (ISTA) are contributing to an international effort to address this issue. They teamed up with local researchers in Tajikistan and collaborators in Switzerland, Austria, and France to establish their own climate station on a benchmark catchment and model the glacier’s changes over more than two decades. Now, their first joint publication shows evidence that the glacier likely reached its tipping point in 2018.

“Due to the general lack of data and robust future projections in the region, we can’t tell yet whether this was truly the ‘point of no return’ for Pamir glaciers,” says the study’s first author, Achille Jouberton, a PhD student in the Pellicciotti group at ISTA. “We must keep in mind that this study only considers one specific catchment and extends from 1999 to 2023. However, it is the first study of its kind. Similar efforts will need to address these issues on a larger geographical scale.”

Understanding an anomalous state

Climate change has had a substantial impact on glaciers worldwide. While those in the Alps, Andes, and elsewhere in the world have been melting at a disconcerting rate, some glaciers in the Central Asian Pamir and Karakoram mountains were found to be surprisingly stable, possibly even growing. This unexpected and counterintuitive behavior of the glaciers has been termed the Pamir-Karakoram Anomaly. “Central Asia is a semiarid region that is highly dependent on snow and ice melt for downstream water supply,” says ISTA Professor Pellicciotti. “But we still do not fully understand the causes of this anomalous glacier state.” Are these the last resilient glaciers in the face of climate change?

The team chose to establish their monitoring site on Kyzylsu Glacier in the northwestern Pamir, in central Tajikistan. This climate station is situated at an elevation of just below 3400 meters above sea level in a country where half of the territory rises above 3000 meters. “Kyzylsu is becoming a benchmark monitoring site due to the various observational sites recently established on and around the glacier,” explains Jouberton. There, the researchers aim to start to shed light on the glaciers’ anomalous behavior in the region.

“The challenge is that there is almost no data at all.”

Since setting up their monitoring network at the Kyzylsu catchment in 2021, the team has collected extensive data about snowfall and water resources in the area. Using these observations and climate reanalysis data as inputs to their computational models, they were able to simulate the glacier’s behavior from 1999 to 2023. “We modeled the catchment’s climate, its snowpack, the glacier mass balances, and the water movements,” says Jouberton. “But whichever way we analyzed the model, we saw an important tipping point in 2018 at the latest. Since then, the decreased snowfall has changed the glacier’s behavior and affected its health.”

In fact, the glacier ice melt has increased, compensating for around a third of the lost water resources from reduced precipitation. Therefore, it seems the anomalous phase of the glacier’s relative stability in the face of climate change has reached its end.

The researchers used computational models driven by their critically important, new local observations. However, observational data alone would not have answered all questions, even if dense coverage was provided. “We need models and simulations anyway in our work, from the bottom of the valley to the top of the glacier. Even in Europe and Canada, where the monitoring networks are much more extensive, climate stations remain small, localized points on the map,” says Jouberton. “But the challenge in the Pamir region is that there is almost no data at all.” Therefore, the researchers have to densify the observational mesh. “In light of all these challenges, we are not sure how accurate the input to the model is. But since it performed well against independent observations, we are quite confident about the output. Our work is a first step in the right direction.”

Backpacks loaded with precious equipment

Since establishing the collaboration in 2021, while the Pellicciotti group was located at the Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research (WSL), the researchers have visited Tajikistan seven times. “We’ve planned field trips every summer with the local research institutes in Dushanbe and hiked with our backpacks loaded with precious equipment to set camp in remote mountains, cut off from the world. Having local scientists as part of the field trip not only favors close collaboration and scientific exchange but also helps us overcome the language barrier while interacting with the local inhabitants who depend on the glaciers,” says Jouberton.

2025 marks a milestone as this summer’s field trip was the last one within the project’s current funding period. Among this year’s goals were updating and automating the monitoring networks to ensure they remain functional for decades to come. By also sharing essential knowledge about the equipment’s maintenance with local inhabitants, they hope to make their work more sustainable and reduce the need for frequent field trips. Up to now, they had to travel to exchange the equipment’s internal batteries, maintain the stations’ functionality, and collect their data using USB sticks.

Considerable local impact

The team’s work relies on close cooperation with the locals. “The shepherds know us. They see us every year and often invite us for lunch. They know where we set up our stations and do their best to ensure that nothing disturbs the measurements,” says Jouberton. The team discusses the data with the locals, shares information, and works in the wilderness amid the local inhabitants, their children, and livestock. Frequently, the locals report events that have happened in the mountains. “It is impressive to hear the locals tell us about things we only saw in satellite data. This gives a real and personal impact to our work.”

The Kyzylsu catchment contributes to the drainage basin of the Amu Darya, one of the major rivers in Central Asia, whose water originates almost entirely from glaciers. The Amu Darya is also a former inflow of the now mostly dried-up Aral Sea. This inland sea has suffered from the ongoing decades-long diversion of its two main inflow rivers, the Amu Darya to the south and the Syr Darya to the northeast, to irrigate cotton fields created in the desert during Soviet times. “But the effects of the glaciers are the strongest in their immediate ecosystems,” says Jouberton. “Even though the Kyzylsu Glacier and likely other Pamir glaciers seem to be melting faster and pumping more water into the system, it is unlikely that they will refill what’s left of the Aral Sea.”

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The present study was conducted by researchers from the Pellicciotti group at the Institute of Science and Technology Austria (ISTA), previously at the Swiss Federal Research Institute WSL, Switzerland, in collaboration with scientists from the Institute of Environmental Engineering, ETH Zurich, Switzerland, the University of Zurich, Department of Geography, Glaciology and Geomorphodynamics Group, Switzerland, the Department of Geosciences, University of Fribourg, Switzerland, the Institut des Géosciences de l’Environnement, Université Grenoble-Alpes, CNRS, IRD, France, the Department of Atmospheric and Cryospheric Sciences, University of Innsbruck, Austria, the Geophysical Institute, University of Alaska Fairbanks, USA, the Center for the Research of Glaciers of the Tajik Academy of Tajikistan, Dushanbe, Tajikistan, and the Mountain Societies Research Institute, University of Central Asia, Dushanbe, Tajikistan.