亚洲天堂

Skip to content

What will happen in Alaska鈥檚 capital as its magnificent glacier recedes?

Mendenhall Glacier is receding so quickly that by 2050, it might no longer be visible from the visitor center
33531188_web1_20230806020812-64cf3a4195a077b822d4cbd5jpeg
Kerry Kirkpatrick, a resident of Juneau, Alaska, poses outside her home on June 13, 2023. Kirkpatrick is concerned with the sustainability of the current level of tourism in Juneau. The city is expecting a record number of cruise passengers this year.(AP Photo/Becky Bohrer)

Thousands of tourists spill onto a boardwalk in Alaska鈥檚 capital city every day from cruise ships towering over downtown. Vendors hawk shoreside trips and rows of buses stand ready to whisk visitors away, with many headed for the area鈥檚 crown jewel: the Mendenhall Glacier.

A craggy expanse of gray, white and blue, the glacier gets swarmed by sightseeing helicopters and attracts visitors by kayak, canoe and foot. So many come to see the glacier and Juneau鈥檚 other wonders that the city鈥檚 immediate concern is how to manage them all as a record number are expected this year. Some residents flee to quieter places during the summer, and a deal between the city and cruise industry will limit how many ships arrive next year.

But climate change is melting the Mendenhall Glacier. It is receding so quickly that by 2050, it might no longer be visible from the visitor center it once loomed outside.

That鈥檚 prompted another question Juneau is only now starting to contemplate: What happens then?

鈥淲e need to be thinking about our glaciers and the ability to view glaciers as they recede,鈥 said Alexandra Pierce, the city鈥檚 tourism manager. There also needs to be a focus on reducing environmental impacts, she said. 鈥淧eople come to Alaska to see what they consider to be a pristine environment and it鈥檚 our responsibility to preserve that for residents and visitors.鈥

The glacier pours from rocky terrain between mountains into a lake dotted by stray icebergs. Its face retreated eight football fields between 2007 and 2021, according to estimates from University of Alaska Southeast researchers. Trail markers memorialize the glacier鈥檚 backward march, showing where the ice once stood. Thickets of vegetation have grown in its wake.

While massive chunks have broken off, most ice loss has come from the thinning due to warming temperatures, said Eran Hood, a University of Alaska Southeast professor of environmental science. The Mendenhall has now largely receded from the lake that bears its name.

Scientists are trying to understand what the changes might mean for the ecosystem, including salmon habitat.

There are uncertainties for tourism, too.

Most people enjoy the glacier from trails across Mendenhall Lake near the visitor center. Caves of dizzying blues that drew crowds several years ago have collapsed and pools of water now stand where one could once step from the rocks onto the ice.

Manoj Pillai, a cruise ship worker from India, took pictures from a popular overlook on a recent day off.

鈥淚f the glacier is so beautiful now, how would it be, like, 10 or 20 years before? I just imagine that,鈥 he said.

Officials with the Tongass National Forest, under which the Mendenhall Glacier Recreation Area falls, are bracing for more visitors over the next 30 years even as they contemplate a future when the glacier slips from casual view.

The agency is proposing new trails and parking areas, an additional visitor center and public use cabins at a lakeside campground. Researchers do not expect the glacier to disappear completely for at least a century.

鈥淲e did talk about, 鈥業s it worth the investment in the facilities if the glacier does go out of sight?鈥欌 said Tristan Fluharty, the forest鈥檚 Juneau district ranger. 鈥淲ould we still get the same amount of visitation?鈥

A thundering waterfall that is a popular place for selfies, salmon runs, black bears and trails could continue attracting tourists when the glacier is not visible from the visitor center, but 鈥渢he glacier is the big draw,鈥 he said.

Around 700,000 people are expected to visit this year, with about 1 million projected by 2050.

Other sites offer a cautionary tale. Annual visitation peaked in the 1990s at around 400,000 to the Begich, Boggs Visitor Center, southeast of Anchorage, with the Portage Glacier serving as a draw. But now, on clear days, a sliver of the glacier remains visible from the center, which was visited by about 30,000 people last year, said Brandon Raile, a spokesperson with the Chugach National Forest, which manages the site. Officials are discussing the center鈥檚 future, he said.

鈥淲here do we go with the Begich, Boggs Visitor Center?鈥 Raile said. 鈥淗ow do we keep it relevant as we go forward when the original reason for it being put there is not really relevant anymore?鈥

At the Mendenhall, rangers talk to visitors about climate change. They aim to 鈥渋nspire wonder and awe but also to inspire hope and action,鈥 said Laura Buchheit, the forest鈥檚 Juneau deputy district ranger.

After , about 1.6 million cruise passengers are expected in Juneau this year, during a season stretching from April through October.

The city, nestled in a rainforest, is one stop on what are generally week-long cruises to Alaska beginning in Seattle or Vancouver, British Columbia. Tourists can leave the docks and move up the side of a mountain in minutes via a popular tram, see bald eagles perch on light posts and enjoy a vibrant Alaska Native arts community.

On the busiest days, about 20,000 people, equal to two-thirds of the city鈥檚 population, pour from the boats.

City leaders and major cruise lines agreed to a daily five-ship limit for next year. But critics worry that won鈥檛 ease congestion if the vessels keep getting bigger. Some residents would like one day a week without ships. As many as seven ships a day have arrived this year.

Juneau Tours and Whale Watch is one of about two dozen companies with permits for services like transportation or guiding at the glacier. Serene Hutchinson, the company鈥檚 general manager, said demand has been so high that she neared her allotment halfway through the season. Shuttle service to the glacier had to be suspended, but her business still offers limited tours that include the glacier, she said.

Other bus operators are reaching their limits, and tourism officials are encouraging visitors to see other sites or get to the glacier by different means.

Limits on visitation can benefit tour companies by improving the experience rather than having tourists 鈥渟hoehorned鈥 at the glacier, said Hutchinson, who doesn鈥檛 worry about Juneau losing its luster as the glacier recedes.

鈥淎laska does the work for us, right?鈥 she said. 鈥淎ll we have to do is just kind of get out of the way and let people look around and smell and breathe.鈥

Pierce, Juneau鈥檚 tourism manager, said discussions are just beginning around what a sustainable southeast Alaska tourism industry should look like.

In Sitka, home to a slumbering volcano, the number of cruise passengers on a day earlier this summer exceeded the town鈥檚 population of 8,400, overwhelming businesses, dragging down internet speeds and prompting officials to question how much tourism is too much.

Juneau plans to conduct a survey that could guide future growth, such as building trails for tourism companies.

Kerry Kirkpatrick, a Juneau resident of nearly 30 years, recalls when the Mendenhall鈥檚 face was 鈥渓ong across the water and high above our heads.鈥 She called the glacier a national treasure for its accessibility and noted an irony in carbon-emitting helicopters and cruise ships chasing a melting glacier. She worries the current level of tourism isn鈥檛 sustainable.

As the Mendenhall recedes, plants and animals will need time to adjust, she said.

So will humans.

鈥淭here鈥檚 too many people on the planet wanting to do the same things,鈥 Kirkpatrick said. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 want to be the person who closes the door and says, you know, 鈥業鈥檓 the last one in and you can鈥檛 come in.鈥 But we do have to have the ability to say, 鈥楴o, no more.鈥欌

Becky Bohrer, The Associated Press





(or

亚洲天堂

) document.head.appendChild(flippScript); window.flippxp = window.flippxp || {run: []}; window.flippxp.run.push(function() { window.flippxp.registerSlot("#flipp-ux-slot-ssdaw212", "Black Press Media Standard", 1281409, [312035]); }); }