EGU2020-2642, updated on 12 Jan 2022
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-2642
EGU General Assembly 2020
© Author(s) 2022. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

A new working group on the Regional Assessments of Glacier MAss Change (RAGMAC)

Michael Zemp1, Matthias H. Braun2, Alex S. Gardner3, Bert Wouters4, Geir Moholdt5, and Regine Hock6
Michael Zemp et al.
  • 1University of Zurich, Department of Geography, Zurich, Switzerland (michael.zemp@geo.uzh.ch)
  • 2University of Erlangen-Nürnberg, Germany
  • 3NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, USA
  • 4Institute for Marine and Atmosphere Research & Delft University of Technology, Netherlands
  • 5Norwegian Polar Institute, Norway
  • 6University of Fairbanks, USA

Retreating and thinning glaciers are icons of climate change and impact the local hazard situation, regional runoff as well as global sea level. For past IPCC reports, regional glacier change assessments were challenged by the small number and heterogeneous spatio-temporal distribution of in situ measurement series and uncertain representativeness for the respective mountain range as well as by spatial limitations of current satellite altimetry (only point data) and gravimetry (coarse resolution). Towards IPCC SROCC, there have been considerable improvements with respect to available geodetic datasets. Geodetic volume change assessments for entire mountain ranges have become possible thanks to recently available and comparably accurate DEMs. At the same time, advances have been made in processing methods for radar altimetry (CryoSat-2 swath processing), as well as new spaceborne laser altimetry (ICESat-2) and gravimetry (GRACE-FO) missions are in orbit and about to release data products to the science community. This opens new opportunities for regional evaluations of results from different methods as well as for truly global assessments of glacier mass changes and related contributions to sea-level rise. At the same time, the glacier research and monitoring community is facing new challenges related to data size, formats, and availability as well as new questions with regard to best practises for data processing chains and for related uncertainty assessments.

In this PICO presentation, we introduce a new working group of the International Association of Cryospheric Sciences (IACS) on Regional Assessments of Glacier Mass Change (RAGMAC; https://cryosphericsciences.org/activities/wg-ragmac/). The overall goal of this working group (WG) is bringing together the research community that is assessing regional glacier mass changes from various observation technologies and to come up with a new consensus estimate of global glacier mass changes and related uncertainties. The WG is organized in three work packages, two related to different remote sensing technologies (WG1: glaciological and geodetic DEM-differencing methods, WG2: altimetry and gravimetry) and a third that aims at regional comparisons of corresponding results. Participation is open to everybody who is willing to actively contribute to one or several of these work packages.

How to cite: Zemp, M., Braun, M. H., Gardner, A. S., Wouters, B., Moholdt, G., and Hock, R.: A new working group on the Regional Assessments of Glacier MAss Change (RAGMAC), EGU General Assembly 2020, Online, 4–8 May 2020, EGU2020-2642, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-2642, 2020.

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