After years of calling climate change a hoax, he must've noticed Russia and China growing Naval routes in newly created Arctic seas. Plus, the Danish nation will be prime real estate when that ice melts. at least that's what someone like Trump would think; it also could turn to permafrost sludge quicksand. Here are two reports on melting glaciers in Greenland and, just like with the extreme weather we're having, no mainstream news is going to mention the climate change connection as they speculate why he's going after Greenland. VIDEO !: A series of reports in 2025 reached the same conclusion: climate change is melting the glaciers of ice at alarming rates- READ & WATCH- Nov 9, 2025 GREENLAND- Climate change melting world's mountain, BBC video and transcripts for both below:[Official Channel of TeleSUR Joined YT May 9, 2011 230K subscribers 71,641 videos]
***TRANSCRIPT***Welcome back. There's been little good news for glaciers in 2025. A series of reports all reached the same conclusion. Climate change is melting these bodies of ice at alarming rates.
Climate change is melting these bodies of ice at alarming rates. ********
Let's see. The year got off to a bad start for the world's glaciers. A major report published in early February showed climate change was melting the world's mountain glaciers faster than ever. They are now shrinking at more than twice the speed of the early 2000s. According to the study, researchers said the world has lost more than 7 trillion tons of ice from mountain glaciers since 2000. In 2023, the world's glaciers lost more than 600 billion tons of ice.
Some of the fastest melts are in Alaska. And the smaller glaciers in central Europe, such as the Alps, have shrunk the most proportionally. What are they doing at the moment and what does that tell us about them? And as I say, they're losing 400 billion tons of ice per year.
New research showed that even limiting global temperatures to 1.5° C under the Paris climate agreement won't protect many heavily populated coastlines. The study by an international group of researchers says the target should instead be closer to one degree to avoid losses from the polar ice sheets. According to Durham University's Chris Stokes, the lead author of the report, the mass of ice lost from these ice sheets has quadrupled since the 1990s. He says that with current warming levels of 1.2 degrees above pre-industrial levels. The planet is losing around 370 billion tons of ice per year. The figures from the report are taken from the latest Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Assessment.
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RECENT RELEVANT
Thursday, December 4, 2025
LNG from permafrost melt, oil, new Arctic routes- Global warming makes Greenland "new choke point Russia and China are seizing"- Deep Dive Global channel Hong Kong 44-min Dec 1 report w transcript, Heating Planet blog Arctic ice melt unlocks new strategic frontiers.
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Monday, November 3, 2025
Calving multiplier effect "until recently we never knew existed" amplifies ice loss in Greenland, 13-min film w transcript, Heating Planet blogThe very act of a glacier shedding ice into the ocean triggers a process that accelerates its own destruction.
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TRANSCRIPT cont'd
With migration already a thorny issue around the globe, scientists say sea level rise will in the future make the mass movement of people inevitable. A healthy glacier is considered dynamic, generating new ice as snow falls on it at higher elevations while melting at lower altitudes. The losses in mass at lower levels are compensated by gains above. As a warming climate pushes melting to higher altitudes, this process stalls. This lack of dynamic regeneration is the most likely cause behind the emergence and persistence of holes seemingly caused by water turbulence at the bottom of the glacier or by air flowing through gaps that appear inside the blocks of ice.
As 2025 comes to a close, the alarming rate at which glaciers are melting serves as a stark reminder of the intensifying impacts of climate change. Reports reveal that mountain glaciers are shrinking faster than ever, and the loss of ice from polar regions continues to accelerate. Despite efforts to limit global warming to 1.5° C, the reality is that even this target may not protect vulnerable coastlines from rising sea levels. With mass ice loss projected to increase, migration due to environmental changes will become an unavoidable challenge. As we approach 2026, urgent action to curb global warming remains critical to mitigate further irreversible damage to our planet's ice reserves.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VbxHYiUyiOYALSO
VIDEO 2
ANOTHER REPORT on Greenland melting- FROM BBC NEWS: Communities in northern Greenland have lived in one of the world's toughest environments for centuries. But temperatures have risen faster in the Arctic region than elsewhere on earth, and the impact of climate change is being felt on the local way of life. Greenland‘s ice cap is the single biggest contributor to global sea levels rises and what happens to the ice sheet and glaciers will impact the rest of the world. READ & WATCH The impact of climate change on Greenland as the Arctic heats up- BBC News Oct 12, 2022, transcript below-
[BBC] *****TRANSCRIPT*****in many ways, Greenland is on the front line of climate change. Today its ice cap is the single biggest contributor to global sea level rises. In the north of Greenland, people have lived and thrived in one of the world's toughest environments. For local communities,Climate change feels close to home as Adrian Murray reports from the Arctic coastal town of illulusat. Greenland's fishing industry
A: Giant icebergs the size of city blocks tower over Disko Bay. Gallerac Matthierson has been fishing in these icy waters since he was 14 years old. **Each season is not how it used to be over the years I special notice that the icebergs have been getting smaller and weaker.**in Winter he used to cross the sea lines with his sled dogs but it no longer freezes like it used to so now he only fishes by boats. **Of course I was very worried when I started to notice that the ice Berry was getting weaker and witnessing such an astronomical change in the climate**
Sled dogs
Galorac still owns more than 30 sled dogs but puts them for his son there's a constant soundtrack of sled dogs howling and barking, two decades ago there were five thousand of them in this town now though there's only 1800. Illillisat means iceberg in Greenlandic and-
The nearby Field is jam-packed with ice that's carved from the summit core shock or Jacob's hand Glacier 50 kilometers away; it's an outlet of the Greenland ice sheet and more icebergs are produced here than anywhere else in the northern hemisphere.
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really really abrupt changes
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Skillfully weaving through these floating giants Jonathanson is a skipper on her tour boats; even young people like him have witnessed change within their lifetimes. **I think this year has been unusual compared to the others; a lot of places in Greenland have Records in Rain nowadays we never know how the winter is going to be.**
While some old traditions are slipping away, in many ways Arctic life has become easier. It’s possible to fish year round and Illillisat is booming.
However this month Greenland's ice sheets saw unseasonable melting and just recently a group of climate scientists warned that major sea level rise is inevitable.
Alan Hubbard: At the moment it's a system that's in deficit. The amount of snow falling in- it can't keep up with the Melt and the iceberg calving; what I've come to understand in the last 10 years is that there are really really abrupt changes going on.
Research carried out Climate change in Greenland before the pandemic found that three-quarters of greenlanders felt that climate change had impacted their lives. In the capital I met Iluna Sorensen a young student and activist. **So when you're from Greenland you're so closely linked to Nature and all the changes you see you see them quite clearly people do get scared that their future is changing so much but also their present day** How global warming impacts Greenland will affect all of us but it's already being felt close to home Adrian Murray BBC News England*** https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jzm_ZXeHRbY***

