Swiss Glaciers Have Shrunk by a Quarter Since 2015, Study Says
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A study found that Swiss glaciers have shrunk by a quarter since 2015, sparking emotional responses and discussions about the implications of climate change.
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It's time to own up to the fact that China is going out of their way to use renewables, and the U. S. is actively sabotaging renewable energy programs. Whining about China is starting to look pretty silly.
Sure, they are starting from a high number as the worlds manufacturer, but they're are clearly making strides that the other major industrial nations (the US) are not.
Until not long ago, they very likely even processed your own trash.
* "FERC: Solar + wind made up 91% of new US power generating capacity in H1 2025" [1] - The rollback of the IRA will reduce the speed of the US transition.
* "Solar and wind growth exceeded global demand growth in the first half of 2025" [2]
* Perovskite solar panels could lead to even lower solar costs [3]
There's also increased investment in nuclear, exicting geothermal advances (eg. Fervo Energy), increasing EV sales, a massive expansion of battery storage, zero emissions concrete (https://sublime-systems.com/). There are lots of positive developments, so I'd recommend learning more about them to offset your current fears and introduce some hope.
1. https://electrek.co/2025/09/03/ferc-solar-wind-91-percent-ne...
2. https://ember-energy.org/latest-insights/global-electricity-...
3. https://www.ft.com/content/a5095373-1762-41cd-a078-af533e264...
> AI can gave you a more exhaustive list
...so maybe it should not?
In relation to electricity this is not the case for H1 2025, as shown in the article "Solar and wind growth exceeded global demand growth in the first half of 2025" [1]
> ...so maybe it should not?
Fair point.
1. https://ember-energy.org/latest-insights/global-electricity-...
https://ember-energy.org/data/china-cleantech-exports-data-e...
https://ember-energy.org/latest-insights/china-energy-transi...
https://www.noahpinion.blog/p/china-is-quietly-saving-the-wo...
https://foreignpolicy.com/2025/08/21/china-clean-renewable-e...
If you care about America using carbon-light power you should throw your weight behind nuclear, geothermal, and some wind/solar/battery manufactured domestically, by allies, or within our sphere of influence.
You also have to make carbon uneconomical. China's CO2 emissions have continued to increase rapidly along with renewables.
Energy is really useful and we don't have enough to fulfil demand. Unless renewables + nuclear are cheaper than carbon and not supply constrained I'd expect both sources to increase in tandem.
Enough sunlight falls on Earth in ~30 min to power humanity for a year. There is currently a capture constraint, not a supply constraint, which is currently being solved for.
> Unless renewables + nuclear are cheaper than carbon and not supply constrained I'd expect both sources to increase in tandem.
Renewables are cheaper than carbon, even when accounting for storage, unsubsidized. Some will say "what about seasonal!?" Not solved for yet; fossil gas for the gaps until solar, wind, transmission, batteries, and demand response/orchestration keep closing that gap. Nuclear will never be cheap unfortunately.
https://ember-energy.org/latest-updates/24-hour-solar-now-ec...
https://www.surrey.ac.uk/news/solar-energy-now-worlds-cheape...
https://www.authorea.com/users/960972/articles/1329770-solar... | https://doi.org/10.22541/au.175647950.09188768/v1
(think in systems)
Is that based on the entire surface of the earth, or just dry land?
> or just dry land?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Floating_solar
https://www.rwe.com/en/research-and-development/solar-energy...
https://www.nrel.gov/news/detail/press/2025/floating-solar-p...
https://www.pbs.org/newshour/science/long-popular-in-asia-fl...
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S221462962...
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S136403212...
https://time.com/china-massive-floating-solar-field/
https://theelectricityhub.com/seychelles-launches-floating-s...
We may at some point cross the cost curve and I hope we do but not obvious we are there yet.
China's emissions fell 2.7% this year. https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45108292 Not per-capita emissions, total emissions.
Per annum total global coal use has peaked and is projected to fall from this year forward.
China's use is becoming "better" (closing many small dirty old coal power stations, opening fewer but larger and more efficient less polluting new ones) while having a set long term plan to phase out coal while using it now to power a transition to renewables (wind turbines and solar panels don't make themselves yet, nor do they yet power their own production).
I can't help but read "we're going to produce and consume more than ever" and I really don't see how it ends in a good way...
Take transportation alone, 1.3 billion ICE vehicles to replace by EVs, there is nothing green about that. Not even talking about the absolutely massive mining operations we'll need to build solar and batteries. What about cement? Steel? Petrol derivate chemistry, medicine, fertilizers,...
And then what? We continue building and consuming more and more shit forever? Who believes this can be "net zero"?
https://www.sas.upenn.edu/~jesusfv/Slides_London.pdf
If that's truly how it'll go we don't even need EVs and renewable to attain equilibrium. But something tells me we'll manage to fuck it up somehow
Less than we need for fossil fuels though.
https://maevethornberry.ie/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/Mer-de... https://drdirtbag.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/athabasca36...
Many climate change deniers I know have moved from "it isn't real" to "so what?" Or, perhaps more charitably, to "addressing climate change is not in the national interest."
I don't think people who want to drill in national parks, privatize and raze old growth preserves, or exhaust fisheries without limits are going to be moved by seeing glaciers melt. They fundamentally have different values and place other interests over preservation and conservation.
It's definitely striking, I can't deny that. I crossed the last remnants of an almost-extinct glacier last year that my guide guessed would be gone in 1-3 years: at the beginning of his career it was a real glacer with non-trivial extents, crevasses, etc.
That must have been maddening for the people who showed up and tried to make sense of it with only Cook's maps.
This researcher's account is interesting to see comparisons of EU glaciers over the last 100 years or so. https://bsky.app/profile/subfossilguy.bsky.social
And this blog: https://glacierchange.blog/
The people worried about melting glaciers are not laminating the loss of pretty ice. They are worried about where this extra energy will go once there is no more ice to change phase and absorb it.
The mass of ice on the earth's poles has also led to the shape of the planet via tectonics over thousands of millennia. As that mass melts and redistributes from a solid to a liquid spreading around the globe our spheroid will begin to rebound. We have sensors everywhere, even in space, so the resulting effects will not be a surprise to some when the 'mass'ive shift begins. As those tectonic events increase in frequency so too will volcanic activity so I ask if anyone else has been checking on such data?
We do not know what we do not know however we act like we know everything yet learn new things about the planet daily. The things the survivors are going to learn about the changes that are setting in will be the last thing those that did not survive experienced from those cataclysmic moments.
It's not like people aren't exposed to the changes.
Glaciers are a crucial component of many ecosystems and ways of life. We can't live on them, but they make it so we can live where we do live now.
The slow release mechanism does seem useful, but a human built reservoir can do the same thing. It doesn’t really seem like something to worry much about? In isolation, anyway. As a canary it might be worrying.
I do feel confused at how everyone is convinced the warming is man made. Like the climate is never static, so it’s either warming or cooling all the time. Our understanding of what happened in the past climate-wise is based on a bunch of methods that are impossible to actually test directly (since we can’t time travel). And the granularity of temperature data I’ve seen from the past is suspect - the short time period we are dealing with here could be an oscillation of a frequency that gets lost in the sampling granularity that actually happens. I’ve done a fair bit of reading looking for the definitive proof, but I just haven’t found it. I’m a bit spectrum-y though and social consensus or pressure doesn’t really work on me, which is kind of unfortunate, I don’t say that proudly. Were you convinced by data on this, or have you just been taught that the experts say this is what is happening? Can you help me?
https://www.glamos.ch/en/factsheet#/B36-26
Some years the glacier count goes down, because a glacier disappears. Some years the glacier count goes up, when a glacier shrinks and splits in two.
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