
-
Bayern goalie Neuer suffers setback in injury recovery
-
Pro-Trump senator set to meet Chinese premier
-
Pakistan detains leading Baloch rights activist: police
-
Israel reports rocket fire from Lebanon, warns of severe response
-
US revokes legal status for 500,000 immigrants
-
Piastri on Chinese GP pole after Hamilton takes first Ferrari win in sprint
-
Last of six foreign hikers missing in Philippines rescued
-
Heavyweight boxing great George Foreman dead at 76
-
Bonnin wins world indoor pole vault gold, Holloway cruises
-
Hamilton hails 'really special' first Ferrari win at China GP sprint
-
Durant scores 42 as Suns eclipse Cavs
-
Japan, China, and South Korea agree to promote peace, cooperation
-
Goffin sends Alcaraz packing in Miami
-
Hamilton dominates Chinese GP sprint for first Ferrari win
-
Heavyweight boxing great George Foreman dead at 76: family
-
Argentina on brink after Almada strike sinks Uruguay
-
Trump brand alternately loved, loathed worldwide
-
Venezuelan migrant dreams of US national amputee soccer stardom
-
Aid freeze silences Latin America media scrutiny of US foes
-
Prospect of copper mine reopening revives tensions in Panama
-
Bridgeman leads Valpar by one at halfway
-
Raducanu savours winning feeling after troubled months
-
Families say tattoos landed Venezuelan migrants in Salvadoran mega-jail
-
Tuchel era off to winning World Cup start, Poland beat Lithuania
-
'We have to do better': Tuchel urges England to improve on winning start
-
Former Dodgers pitcher Urias suspended over domestic violence case
-
Tuchel makes winning start as laboured England beat Albania
-
World's glacier mass shrank again in 2024, UN says
-
Osimhen strikes twice to give Nigeria World Cup boost
-
Global stocks mostly slump as Trump tariffs hit confidence
-
Vonn determined to enjoy possible US farewell at Idaho World Cup finale
-
Japan, China, South Korea foreign ministers meet in Tokyo
-
AI startup Perplexity confirms interest to buy TikTok
-
Trump admits Musk 'susceptible' on China
-
Did tattoos land Venezuelan migrants in a Salvadoran mega-jail?
-
Jaguar looks to woo younger, richer drivers with $160,000 Type 00
-
Sudan army recaptures presidential palace from paramilitaries
-
Hundreds of thousands defy Erdogan to protest Istanbul mayor's arrest
-
Curry to miss Warriors-Hawks after injury
-
Struggling Medvedev suffers early exit in Miami
-
Butt says Man Utd dream of Premier League title by 2028 'ain't going to happen'
-
United States imports eggs from Korea, Turkey to help ease prices
-
Former England star Pearce back on commentary duty after health scare
-
Israel attorney general warns govt against naming new security chief
-
Trump says Boeing won next-generation F-47 fighter jet contract
-
Mexican club Leon banned from FIFA Club World Cup
-
Liverpool's Alisson returns early from Brazil duty with suspected concussion
-
Trump admits Musk 'susceptible' on China amid secret war plan row
-
Thousands defy Erdogan warning to march in Istanbul
-
Global stocks slump again as Trump's tariffs hit confidence

'It was beautiful': Mount Kenya's glaciers melting away
Charles Kibaki Muchiri traced the water trickling across the surface of the Lewis Glacier with his fingers, illustrating how quickly climate change is melting the huge ice blocks off of Africa's second-highest mountain.
For nearly 25 years, the affable 50-year-old guide has been taking hikers to the peaks of Mount Kenya, nearly 5,000 metres (16,400 feet) above sea level, and observing their transformation from a landscape of snow and ice, to brown rock.
"It was very beautiful," he told AFP mournfully on a recent ascent.
He recalled the ice caves and thick layer of snow that lasted several months on the peaks of this ancient volcano.
The Lewis Glacier once covered one of Mount Kenya's slopes.
The imposing mass of ice visible in archive photos has now been reduced to just two blocks -- the biggest only a few dozen metres wide.
Muchiri said he fears the glacier will be entirely gone in a few years, transforming the landscape and discouraging visitors.
His observations are backed up by numerous studies, while scientists have found ice loss from the world's glaciers has accelerated over the past decade as the planet warms.
Mount Kenya is one of the only mountains on the African continent with glaciers, and scientists fear that as soon as 2030, it could become one of the first to turn entirely ice-free in modern times.
The Lewis Glacier lost 90 percent of its volume between 1934 and 2010, according to a 2011 study led by Rainer Prinz of Austria's University of Innsbruck.
A satellite study last year, published in the journal Environmental Research: Climate, found that the surface area of the ice on Mount Kenya was just 4.2 percent of the size compared with the first reliable observations in 1900.
That is in keeping with other African mountains, including the highest, Mount Kilimanjaro, which has just 8.6 percent of its ice surface left, according to the study.
- 'Just melt away' -
Although less well-known than Kilimanjaro, Mount Kenya is also a UNESCO World Heritage Site that attracts thousands of visitors each year.
Elephants can sometimes be seen in the dense forest at its base, while the trees give way to verdant hills on the ascent. After long hours of hiking, the brown rocks of the summit appear.
Prinz said the ice shrinkage is down to temperature changes at the surface of the Indian Ocean that transport moisture throughout east Africa, "and, hence, affected by our warming planet".
The mountains no longer receive sufficient snow and are deprived of the white blanket that protects the glaciers from the effects of solar radiation, he said.
"If they don't have that, they will just melt away," he said.
Porter and guide Godfrey Mwangi, 28, said he has already seen many glaciers disappear.
He pointed to a whitewashed cliff overlooking Shiptons Camp at an altitude of 4,200 metres, once covered in a sheet of ice.
The mountain is still home to atypical flora and unique landscapes, Muchiri added, but the loss of glacier ice has put a stop to certain types of technical climbing.
- 'Ice cubes' -
Rivers are also drying up, with consequences for the flora, fauna and residents of villages at the foot of the revered mountain.
The glaciers were never large enough to constitute significant water reservoirs, according to scientists, but had considerable tourist and scientific importance.
There are other ice blocks left on the mountain, but Prinz said they are now "more or less a pile of ice cubes".
The Lewis Glacier did once have an effect on local water supplies, added Alexandros Makarigakis, a UNESCO hydrologist, but it has become so small that its contribution to the local environment has evaporated.
Makarigakis welcomes projects led by young Kenyans to plant trees around the base of the mountain in the hope of slowing the loss of snow.
But he said it will only delay the inevitable.
"Pretty soon we will have a generation that will never associate Africa with glaciers," he said.
Y.Nakamura--AMWN