Matthias Huss, who heads the Swiss Glacier Monitoring Network (GLAMOS), an organization that collects and analyzes glacier data in collaboration with the Swiss Academy of Sciences, expressed deep concern, describing the losses in 2022 and 2023 as ‘mind-boggling’ and an acceleration beyond previous experience. He emphasized that such extreme changes would have been impossible without the influence of climate change.
Unusually, even high-altitude regions that typically don't experience such significant declines have recorded ice loss. In southern Valais and the Engadin Valley, at altitudes exceeding 3,200 m, several meters of ice have disappeared, as reported by GLAMOS.
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Reports further add that these losses have occurred after a winter with very limited snowfall, with snow levels in the latter half of February reaching a record low of around 30% of the long-term average. Furthermore, a summer characterized by high temperatures resulted in accelerated snow melt, with a scorching and dry June causing snow to melt two to four weeks earlier than usual.