February 16, 2026

Capitalizations Index – B ∞/21M

Greenland’s Fastest-Melting Glacier Starts Growing Again

Greenland’s fastest-melting glacier starts growing again

Greenland’s Fastest-Melting Glacier Starts Growing Again

Greenland's fastest-melting glacier
Image source: YouTube Video Screenshot

NASA has conducted yet another study on climate change and global warming and found that Greenland’s fastest-melting glacier is showing progress in recovery. The study highlights an important milestone in taking measures to slow and alter the effects of climate change.

Greenland’s fastest-melting glacier, also known as the Jakobshayn (YA-cob-shawy-en) glacier, was retreating about 1.8 miles and thinning by almost 130 feet per year as of 2012. Now according to a new study published in the journal Nature Geoscience, the large glacier has begun growing again similar rates in the last two years. However, the authors of the study warn that this growth might only be temporary.

“That was kind of a surprise. We kind of got used to a runaway system,” Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland scientist Jason Box told the Associated Press. “The good news is that it’s a reminder that it’s not necessarily going that fast. But it is going.”

Although Box didn’t participate in the study, he said Jakobshavn is “arguably the most important Greenland glacier because it discharges the most ice in the northern hemisphere. For all of Greenland, it is king.”

They believe natural cyclical cooling enabled the glacier to start growing again, according to lead author Ala Khazendar, a NASA glaciologist on the Oceans Melting Greenland (OMG) project. The authors of the study say the regrowth in Greenland’s fastest-melting glacier also coincides with the flip of the North Atlantic Oscillation, a natural temporary cooling and warming process in parts of the ocean which is similar to El Nino in the Pacific Ocean. The study found that temperatures in the water where Jakobshavn hits the ocean, a place known as Disko Bay, are an average of 3.6 degrees cooler than they were several years ago.

“In the long run we’ll probably have to raise our predictions of sea level rise again,” Willis said.

Khazendar compared the ocean temperatures near Greenland to an escalator rising slowly due to global warming. However, he added that the natural North Atlantic Oscillation sometimes jumps down or up multiple steps at a time. He also said that although for now, ocean temperatures in the area are cooling and affecting the nearby glaciers, in the long run, global temperatures are warming. That would mean Greenland’s fastest-melting glacier will melt even more.

According to the AP, at least four scientists who didn’t participate in the study believe in its findings. Ian Joughin, an ice scientist at the University of Washington who didn’t participate in the study, predicted the change seven years ago. He now says it would be a “grave mistake” if the data from the new study is presented in such a way that suggests it contradicts the effects of climate change.

According to Joughin, what is happening right now is  “to a large extent, a temporary blip. Downturns do occur in the stock market, but overall the long term trajectory is up. This is really the same thing.”

The post Greenland’s Fastest-Melting Glacier Starts Growing Again appeared first on ValueWalk.

Published at Thu, 28 Mar 2019 04:07:44 +0000

Previous Article

Robert Shiller: There Could Be Declines In Home Prices Especially At The High End

Next Article

Ethereum Price Analysis: ETH Bullish Case For Breakout Above $140

You might be interested in …

How to earn bitcoin

How to Earn Bitcoin

How to Earn bitcoin bitcoin is the most valuable digital currency in the world. It’s no surprise many people are looking to earn some. When it was first created, 1 bitcoin technically was worth $0. […]

An Interview With Kavita Gupta, ConsenSys’s Pick to Oversee Its New $50M Venture Fund

An Interview With Kavita Gupta, ConsenSys’s Pick to Oversee Its New $50M Venture Fund

ConsenSys, an Ethereum production studio based in Brooklyn, NY, is launching a $50 million venture arm, and it has picked Kavita Gupta to run it. Gupta’s job will be to oversee the new venture and help structure deals with the startups.

It is not uncommon for companies with investment capital to form their own investment arm. For the most part, the goal is to fund startups that could drive value for the parent company down the line. And, as a strategic investor, ConsenSys Ventures will be actively involved in developing startups from an early stage.

bitcoin Magazine spoke with Gupta on the phone earlier this week. She was in New York getting ready to dash off to San Francisco. ConsenSys has offices in Brooklyn and in San Francisco, and Gupta will be splitting her time between both of those offices.

She explained she will be working closely with Joseph Lubin, the founder of ConsenSys and one of the early founders of Ethereum. And, she added, naturally, ConsenSys Ventures will be looking to invest in Ethereum-based startups.

“We are looking at companies already, and we are going to deploy this as soon as we get green signals from a lawyer on the structure. Everything else is place,” said Gupta, who will be talking more about the fund at Women in STEM in San Francisco on Monday.

When asked about the overall goals of the venture, she responded, “I think, to Joe, being one of the co-founders of Ethereum, what really matters is how to basically accelerate this revolution. He wants the smartest entrepreneurs to create applications on it, to use it and start ingraining that work into our ecosystem to create companies.”

To that end, ConsenSys Ventures will be looking to invest in pre-seed, seed, and equity stage companies, she explained, adding that the fund will also be investing in pre-token sales, if the entrepreneurs decide to go the initial coin offering (ICOs) route.

Gupta described her role as overseeing the entire process while also being deeply involved with structuring deals. “Like any managing partner, I will be basically doing due diligence, looking at the companies, and structuring the deal. And, at the same time, making sure all the fiduciary duties are done,” she said. “With respect to making the decisions, it is going to be me and Joe working very closely.”

She indicated, finding good startups to invest in would not be an issue. “Once you are in ConsenSys, which is pretty much the center of the blockchain space, you don’t really have to go out looking for great companies,” she said, adding that the team was currently “looking deeply” at four to five startups, but nothing had been finalized yet.

She said she will leave the decision as to whether or not a startup should launch an ICO, up to the entrepreneurs themselves. “We help them create a business. We help them create an idea. I don’t think we are really pushing or saying that every company has to go for token sales. It makes sense for some companies, and for others, it doesn’t make sense. We want to support the entrepreneurs in whatever they do.”

Strategic funding is different than straight venture capital funding, she emphasized. “We want to believe that it is different than the traditional investment because it is sort of like a VC hedge fund. All of the companies are coming to you at a very early stage, and we want to be involved in shaping the company, with respect to business, operations, hiring, and how they are going to make money.”

As part of that, the ConsenSys Ventures will offer a range of support. “We also work as a strategic investor, helping you out both with respect to the technology solutions, because we have access to the ConsenSys ecosystem, and also to deliver the company, because a lot of people forget they have to deliver the company after that.”

She also pointed out that ConsenSys Ventures was part of a natural evolution. Two years ago, ConsenSys launched as a way to build out ideas on top of the Ethereum network. Earlier this year, ConsenSys launched ConsenSys Academy to start training engineers in how to do that work on their own. Now, ConsenSys Ventures is sort of a middle ground, offering support, but still letting entrepreneurs do their own thing.

“Now across the world, entrepreneurs are capable of building and designing — coding their own systems on Ethereum. They don’t necessarily need ConsenSys 100 percent, so how do we collaborate with them? I think Consensys Ventures is the best way to do it.”

A native of India, Gupta is a 2015 recipient of the U.N. Social Finance Innovator Award. In addition to working at the World Bank, where she headed the organization’s youth innovation fund, she has more than 10 years of experience in impact investment across a variety of companies, including McKinsey, HSBC and International Finance Corp.

She has worked in the U.S., the Middle East, South Asia and Africa. She most recently led mission investing for the family foundation of Alphabet Inc. executive Eric Schmidt.

The post An Interview With Kavita Gupta, ConsenSys’s Pick to Oversee Its New $50M Venture Fund appeared first on Bitcoin Magazine.