Peru glaciers shrink 40% in 44 years

File photo: A view of a glacier on the flank of Chopicalqui montain in Huascaran National Park in Huaraz.

File photo: A view of a glacier on the flank of Chopicalqui montain in Huascaran National Park in Huaraz.

Published Oct 17, 2014

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Lima - Peru's glaciers have shrunk by more than 40 percent since 1970 because of climate change, giving birth to nearly 1 000 new lagoons, national water authority ANA said on Thursday.

Peru, which is hosting the United Nations Climate Change Conference, or COP 20, in December, used satellite images to carry out the glacier inventory ahead of the high-level meeting.

The worst-affected glacier was 5 200-meter-high tourist gem Pastoruri in the Andes mountains, which lost 52 percent of its surface to melting over the last four decades as a direct result of climate change, the ANA found.

Peru has 2 679 glaciers across 20 mountain chains that cover about 2 000 square kilometres.

The South American country is one of the world's most biodiverse, with habitats ranging from the Amazon rainforest to snowy mountaintops. - Sapa-AFP

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