46. One glacier produces 10 percent of Earth’s meltwater.
A glacier is a vast mass of ice that moves slowly over land, which is not to be confused with an iceberg, and they are grouped into two categories: alpine glaciers and ice sheets. Essentially, snow becomes compressed over the years on these glaciers and eventually fuse into solid ice masses. The glacier’s weight, combined with the meltwater’s slickness, makes it glide along the landscape. The Canadian Arctic glacier is about the size of New York’s state, and as it melts, it contributes to 90% of the ice melt that is causing sea levels to rise. Between the years 2004 and 2009, it lost enough ice to fill 75% of Lake Erie.

However, other ice sheets are also melting at increasingly rapid rates due to climate change. The Greenland ice sheet drew international attention during the summer of 2019 when its melt rate caused it to lose billions of gallons of ice each day. Glaciers in Alaska and the Antarctic ice sheet are also losing vast amounts of ice in increasingly large numbers. Meltwater provides drinking water for a significant amount of the world’s population and provides water for agricultural irrigation and hydroelectric power. The cities that mostly utilize meltwater include areas in Australia and on the Western coast of North America.