The Greenland Connection
The climate is warming rapidly. Sea levels are rising. And Greenland’s ice is melting at a faster rate than ever before.
In 2010, one of the world’s fastest-moving glaciers in western Greenland, the Ilulissat glacier, also known as Jakobshavn, retreated by a mile in a single summer day.
But why does that matter to us here in the Lowcountry?
Charleston residents have more in common with Greenlanders than you might think. Sure, our coastline has sand and palm trees, while the Arctic coast is speckled with giant icebergs. But our ways of life are dependent on many of the same things.
As in South Carolina, tourism and fishing in Greenland are important industries. Fishers in speedboats set lines as long as half a mile in the Ilulissat Icejford, hoping to hook halibut. In the background, icebergs as tall as 300 feet float by. Tourism also is growing, as scientists, reporters and others arrive to see climate change in action. Greenland has become an international laboratory.
Settlements dot Greenland's coast, with bright pink, blue, red and yellow homes reminiscent of Charleston’s Rainbow Row. The colors break up the monotonous white landscape in wintertime.
Another connection? Sea level rise. Greenland’s melting glaciers are one of the main contributors. Researchers warn that rapid melting of the ice sheet could soon bring us to a tipping point. If the entire ice sheet melted, global sea levels would rise by more than 20 feet.
People along South Carolina's coast know what happens when seas rise: Water enters storefronts; it interrupts morning and afternoon commutes; it raises insurance rates. Lowcountry residents already are making changes. Some are raising homes. Others, who can't afford this, trudge through ever-higher floodwaters. Meanwhile, the city is studying a billion-dollar plan to build a seawall around its historic downtown.
In Greenland, their unique dog sledding culture is at risk. Some hunters have transitioned from using sled dogs, or qimmeq in Greenlandic, to boats because of thinning sea ice. The dog population there has decreased by more than 50 percent in the last two decades.
As one fisher in Ilulissat put it, "No ice, no money."
Greenland's melting ice is part a larger pattern: Extreme weather. We're seeing stronger storms, deadlier heat waves and more frequent floods. All of us are affected in one way or another, whether in Charleston or above the Arctic Circle. Like the weather, we're connected in more ways than we may first think.
Josh Willis, a climate scientist with NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory and the head of the Oceans Melting Greenland project, discusses what is happening in Greenland and the implication it has on sea level rise.