The Star Malaysia

China’s fast-melting glaciers

Baishui’s frosty beauty draws tourists amid climate worries.

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YULONGXUES­HAN: The loud crack rang out from the fog above the Baishui No.1 Glacier as a stone shard careened down the ice, flying past Chen Yanjun as he operated a GPS device.

More projectile­s were tumbling down the hulk of ice that scientists say is one of the world’s fastest melting glaciers.

“We should go,” said the 30-yearold geologist. “The first rule is safety.”

Chen hiked away and onto a barren landscape once buried beneath the glacier. Now there is exposed rock littered with oxygen tanks discarded by tourists visiting the 15,000-foot (4,570m)-high blanket of ice in southern China.

Millions of people each year are drawn to Baishui’s frosty beauty on the southeaste­rn edge of the Third Pole – a region in Central Asia with the world’s third largest store of ice after Antarctica and Greenland that’s roughly the size of Texas and New Mexico combined.

Third Pole glaciers are vital to billions of people from Vietnam to Afghanista­n. Asia’s 10 largest rivers – including the Yangtze, Yellow, Mekong, and Ganges – are fed by seasonal melting.

“You’re talking about one of the world’s largest freshwater sources,” said Ashley Johnson, energy programme manager at the National Bureau of Asian Research, an American think tank.

“Depending on how it melts, a lot of the freshwater will be leaving the region for the ocean, which will have severe impacts on water and food security.”

Earth is today 1°C (1.8°F) hotter than pre-industrial levels because of climate change – enough to melt 28% to 44% of glaciers worldwide, according to a new report by the UN Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change. Temperatur­es are expected to keep rising.

Baishui is about as close to the Equator as Tampa, Florida. And the impacts of climate change already are dramatic.

The glacier has lost 60% of its mass and shrunk 250m (820 feet) since 1982, according to a 2018 report in the Journal of Geophysica­l Research.

Scientists found in 2015 that 82% of glaciers surveyed in China had retreated. They warned that the effects of glacier melting on water resources are gradually becoming “increasing­ly serious” for China.

“China has always had a freshwa-

ter supply problem with 20% of the world’s population but only 7% of its freshwater,” said Jonna Nyman, an energy security lecturer at the University of Sheffield. “That’s heightened by the impact of climate change.”

For years, scientists have observed global warming change Jade Dragon Snow Mountain in the Chinese province of Yunnan.

One research team has tracked Baishui’s retreat of about 27m per

year over the past decade. Flowers, such as snow lotus, have rooted in exposed earth, says Wang Shijin, a glaciologi­st and director of the Yulong Snow Mountain Glacial and Environmen­tal Observatio­n Research Station, part of a network run by the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

“It is not easy to encounter good weather here,” Wang said.

This weather will ensure Yunnan has plenty of freshwater while other glacier loss poses serious risk of drought across the Third Pole, he said.

The next day, the team wore crampons while repairing more sensors scattered across the glacier’s crags.

“Where we’re at right now was back in 2008 all covered with ice,” Wang said. “From here to there at the side, the glacier shrank about 20m to 30m. The shrinking is very remarkable.”

Changes to the Baishui provide the opportunit­y to educate visitors about global warming, Wang said.

Last year, 2.6 million tourists visited the mountain, according to Yulong Snow Mountain park officials.

On blustery day recently, hundreds of tourists climbed wooden stairs through grey fog to snap selfies in front of the glacier.

Hou Yugang said he wasn’t too bothered over climate change and Baishui’s melting.

“I don’t think about it now because it still has a long way to go,” he said.

To protect the glacier, authoritie­s have limited the number of visitors to 10,000 a day and have banned hiking on the ice.

They plan to manufactur­e snow and to dam streams to increase humidity that slows melting. — AP

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 ?? — AP ?? Breathtaki­ng beauty: An aerial photo showing a couple posing for photograph­s at the Valley of the Blue Moon glacial lake fed by the Baishui Glacier No.1 atop the Jade Dragon Snow Mountain in Yunnan.
— AP Breathtaki­ng beauty: An aerial photo showing a couple posing for photograph­s at the Valley of the Blue Moon glacial lake fed by the Baishui Glacier No.1 atop the Jade Dragon Snow Mountain in Yunnan.
 ?? — AP ?? Research work: Glaciologi­st Wang Shijin repairing a broken remote meteorolog­ical station on the Baishui Glacier No.1.
— AP Research work: Glaciologi­st Wang Shijin repairing a broken remote meteorolog­ical station on the Baishui Glacier No.1.

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