Melting
Himalayan Glaciers
KATHMANDU
: More than a billion people
in Asia depend on Himalayan
glaciers for water, but
experts say they are melting
at an alarming rate, threatening
to bring drought to large
swathes of the continent.
Glaciers in the Himalayas,
a 2,400-kilometre (1,500-mile)
range that sweeps through
Pakistan, India, China,
Nepal and Bhutan, provide
headwaters for Asia’s
nine largest rivers, lifelines
for the 1.3 billion people
who live downstream.
But temperatures
in the region have increased
by between 0.15 and 0.6
degrees Celsius (0.27 and
1.08 degrees Fahrenheit)
each decade for the last
30 years, dramatically accelerating
the rate at which glaciers
are shrinking.
As world leaders
gather in Copenhagen this
month for a crucial climate
change summit, campaigners
warn that some Himalayan
glaciers could disappear
altogether within a few
decades.
“Scientists
predict that most glaciers
will be gone in 40 years
as a result of climate change,”
said Prashant Singh, leader
of environmental group WWF’s
Climate for Life campaign.
“The
deal reached at Copenhagen
will have huge ramifications
for the lives of hundreds
of millions of people living
in the Himalayan drainage
systems who are already
highly vulnerable due to
widespread poverty.”
The Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change
(IPCC), a UN body regarded
as the world’s top
authority on climate change,
has warned Himalayan glaciers
could “disappear altogether
by 2035? and experts say
the effects of global warming
are already being felt in
the region.
In Nepal and
Bhutan, the receding glaciers
have formed vast lakes that
threaten to burst, devastating
villages downstream.
Nepalese mountaineer
and environmental campaigner
Dawa Steven Sherpa said
he first became interested
in climate change after
a close call when part of
the Khumbu icefall above
Everest base camp collapsed
during an expedition in
2007.
Sherpa, who
has scaled Everest three
times, was walking on the
glacier minutes before the
collapse, and said his near
miss alerted him to the
dramatic toll that global
warming is already taking
on the Himalayas.
“Every
time I go to the mountains
the older Sherpas tell me
this is the warmest year
yet,” Sherpa, who
will take part in a special
“summiteers’
summit” in Copenhagen,
told AFP.
“Initially
it struck me how much more
dangerous mountaineering
would become. But then I
realised it was much bigger
than that. Entire villages
could be wiped out if one
of the glacial lakes burst.”

Global Warming
Melting Glacier
In China,
studies have shown that
the rapid melting of the
glaciers will result in
an increase in flooding
in the short term, state
news agency Xinhua has reported.
In the longer
term, it said, the continued
retreat of glaciers would
lead to a gradual decrease
in river flows, severely
affecting large parts of
western China.
Experts say
the resulting water shortages
could hit the economic development
of China and India, with
potentially dire consequences
for development in two of
the world’s most populated
countries.
Even in low-lying
Bangladesh, prone to severe
floods, the IPCC has said
rivers could run dry by
the end of the century.
But research
on the impact of global
warming on the rugged and
inaccessible Himalayas remains
sparse, with the IPCC describing
the region as a “blank
spot” due to a lack
of scientific data.
Even the experts
disagree on the issue, with
some arguing that some of
the Himalayan glaciers are
actually advancing.
India’s
Environment Minister Jairam
Ramesh recently came under
fire for denying that climate
change was causing Himalayan
glaciers to melt, citing
research by the Indian geologist
Vijay Kumar Raina.
The Nepal-based
International Centre for
Integrated Mountain Development
(ICIMOD) has studied the
Himalayan region for more
than three decades and warns
of an “urgent need”
for more research on the
impact of climate change.
“There
are so many uncertainties
surrounding where, how and
to what extent the Himalayan
region will be affected
by climate change,”
ICIMOD climate change expert
Arun Shrestha told AFP.
“But
most experts accept that
temperatures are changing,
and this is happening more
rapidly at altitude.”
ICIMOD has
warned that the current
trends in glacial melt suggest
flows in major Asian rivers
including the Ganges, Indus
and Yellow Rivers will be
“substantially reduced”
in the coming decades.
“The
situation may appear to
be normal in the region
for several decades to come,
and even with increased
amounts of water available
to satisfy dry season demands,”
it said in a recent report
on the Himalayas.
“However,
when the shortage arrives,
it may happen abruptly,
with water systems going
from plenty to scarce in
perhaps a few decades or
less.”