Study says Glacier National Park, Montana economy at risk

Heaven's Peak at Montana's Glacier National Park (Photo: National Park Service

Heaven's Peak at Montana's Glacier National Park (Photo: National Park Service

From Green Right Now Reports

The last decade in Glacier National Park saw a doubling of the temperature increase for the planet as a whole. The effects of this warming threaten Glacier National Park’s resources, from glaciers and snow-capped mountains to wildlife and forests, as well as the Montana jobs and tourism revenue the park generates, according to a new report from the Rocky Mountain Climate Organization and the Natural Resources Defense Council.

Drawn by the park’s scenery, wildlife, and other resources, two million people a year visit Glacier, making it the 11th most visited national park in the U.S. Nearly three-quarters of the visitors are from out of state. Almost one-third of all summer visitors to Montana are drawn primarily by the park, and 56 percent of the park’s visitors are returnees. Spending by Glacier visitors may approach $1 billion annually and supports more than 4,000 Montana jobs.

“Human disruption of the climate is the greatest threat ever to our national parks. If we don’t reduce heat-trapping pollutants and protect the resources of Glacier National Park, it will suffer from human-caused climate change,” lead report author Stephen Saunders, president of the Rocky Mountain Climate Organization, said in a statement. “If we let climate change and its impacts get to an unacceptable point, the economy of Montana will suffer, too.”

Highlights of the report include:

  • A new analysis done by RMCO for the report shows that at the one weather station in the park with relatively long-term records, a West Glacier station at park headquarters, the average temperature for the decade just completed (2000-2009) was 2.0 F degrees hotter than the station’s 1950-1979 average. That is exactly double the average global temperature increase of 1.0 F degrees in the past decade compared to a 1950-1979 baseline. For both West Glacier and the planet as a whole, the last decade was the hottest in the history of instrumental measurements.
  • Human-caused climate change could disrupt the unique mix of natural wildlife the park now supports, which offers Americans the best chance they have in the lower 48 states to see the full range of mammal predators present at the time of European settlement of the continent. The wildlife population includes grizzly and black bears, wolves, lynx, wolverines, mountain lions, and more, as well as other large mammals including mountain goats, bighorn sheep and elk. The park’s staff is concerned that climate change could lead to “wholesale changes in species composition.”
  • A recent study for the report found that western Montana in 2000-2008 experienced eight more days a year of 90 F degrees or higher temperatures, and eight days a year of 0 F degrees or lower temperatures, than in 1900 through 1979.
  • A just-completed update by the U.S. Geological Survey, not previously reported publicly, finds that of the 37 named glaciers in the park, only 25 remain large enough to still be considered glaciers. Of the 12 that have melted away, 11 have done so since 1966. Overall glacier acreage in the park in 2005 was 18 percent smaller than in 2005.
  • Glacier is on track to lose all or nearly all of its glaciers, perhaps in the relatively near future. Seven years ago, scientists projected that even modestly hotter summers could eliminate by 2030 all glaciers in one basin in the park. Since that study was published, the glaciers in the basin have melted faster than projected. One author of that study, Daniel B. Fagre of the U.S. Geological Survey’s Northern Mountain Science Center, says the basin’s glaciers now could be gone in just 10 years.
  • A hotter climate is also expected to reduce snowfall and snowpack accumulation in the park. One recent study projects that near the end of this century, peak snowpack levels in the park may be reached 41 days earlier than in mid-20th century, and that snow could cover the ground for about 70 fewer days a winter. With mountains not snow-capped as much or as long into the summer, the scenery that draws most visitors to Glacier — including stunning waterfalls and lakes — would be affected.

“All the available research tells us that visitors come to Montana primarily for its spectacular unspoiled natural beauty,” Rhonda Fitzgerald, innkeeper at The Garden Wall Inn in Whitefish, Mont., said in a statement. “Tourism is Montana’s Number 2 industry, bringing over $3 billion into the state each year, and Glacier National Park is one of the top reasons people visit Montana. Ensuring that the pristine condition of the Crown of the Continent and its intact ecosystem will be maintained is essential to the economic health of Montana’s tourism industry.”