World Day for Glaciers: Global action to protect Earth's water towers
By Gong Zhe
CGTN
1774138778000

Mountains near the Zugspitze ski resort outside Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany, August 20, 2025. /VCG

March 21 marks the World Day for Glaciers. Glaciers are essential to Earth's ecosystem. They serve as freshwater reservoirs, regulate sea levels and support biodiversity.

Glaciers act as nature's water towers, storing about 70% of the world's freshwater. Their seasonal meltwater supports rivers, forests and farmlands.

However, rising global temperatures are accelerating glacier melting, and rapid glacier loss is already affecting communities worldwide.

Germany's four remaining glaciers lost more than a quarter of their total area in just two years, according to new measurements conducted by geographer Wilfried Hagg from Munich University of Applied Sciences and glaciologist Christoph Mayer from the Bavarian Academy of Sciences.

A year of action concludes

A view of Shoesmith Glacier, which is shrinking by 3 centimeters per day, as Turkish scientists from the National Antarctic Science Expeditions determine that the glacier area observed on Horseshoe Island over the past 10 years has suffered significant loss in Antarctica, March 7, 2026. /VCG

The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) and the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) marked the conclusion of the International Year of Glaciers' Preservation on March 18-19 at UNESCO Headquarters in Paris, alongside World Water Day celebrations.

"Protecting glaciers is not only about ice. It is about water, safety, ecosystems and the future of millions of people," said WMO Secretary-General Celeste Saulo.

The International Year brought together 400 organizations, elevated glacier policy visibility and launched the Decade of Action for Cryospheric Sciences (2025-2034) – a longer-term framework to shift from awareness to coordinated action.

The accelerating crisis

A view of the Diamond Beach, Iceland, March 10, 2025. /VCG

The numbers are stark. According to WMO, the 2022-2024 period saw the largest three-year loss of glacier mass on record. Five of the past six years witnessed the most rapid glacier retreat ever recorded.

Global glaciers have lost more than 9,000 billion tonnes of ice since 1975 – equivalent to an ice block the size of Germany, 25 meters thick. Since 2000, the world has lost an average of 273 billion tonnes of ice annually.

In February 2026, researchers documented the fastest glacier collapse ever recorded in Antarctica. The findings, published in Nature Geoscience, underscore the accelerating pace of change.

What's at stake

A view of the Yalong Glacier in the Himalayas, near Changdu, Xizang, December 2, 2023. /VCG

Glacier melt contributes 25% to 30% of sea level rise. Each millimeter of rise exposes 200,000 to 300,000 more people to flooding annually.

The Himalayas – known as the world's "third pole" – supports over 2 billion people. As glaciers retreat, water security for agriculture, drinking and energy generation are increasingly at risk.

"We cannot stop glacier melt. And we cannot stop every hazard, but we can prepare for them through science-based monitoring, forecasting and early warning systems," Saulo said.