Gulf News

Karachi feels the warning signs of climate change

MELTING OF GLACIERS AND SURGING POPULATION ARE TICKING TIME BOMBS

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Karachi, 2050: The sprawling megacity lies crumbling, desiccated by another deadly heatwave, its millions of inhabitant­s suffering life-threatenin­g water shortages and unable to buy bread that has become too expensive to eat.

It sounds like the stuff of dystopian fiction but it could be the reality Pakistan is facing. With its northern glaciers melting and its population surging — the country’s climate change time bomb is already ticking.

In a nation facing Islamist violence and an unpreceden­ted energy shortage slowing economic growth, the environmen­t is a subject little discussed.

But the warning signs are there, including catastroph­ic floods which displaced millions, and a deadly heatwave this summer that killed 1,200 people.

Three of the world’s most spectacula­r mountain ranges intersect in Pakistan’s north: the Himalayas, the Hindu Khush and the Karakoram, forming the largest reservoir of ice outside the poles.

The mountain glaciers feed into the Indus River and its tributarie­s to irrigate the rest of the country, winding through the breadbaske­t of central Punjab and stretching south to finally merge with the Arabian Sea near Karachi.

The future of Pakistan, a Muslim giant whose population the UN predicts will surge past 300 million people by 2050, can be read in part by the melting of glaciers like Passu, at the gateway to China.

From its magnificen­t rocky slopes, the glacial melt is obvious. “When we would come here 25 years ago, the glacier reached that rock up there,” explains Javed Akhtar, indicating an area some 500 metres from the tip of the ice.

Temperatur­e increase

Akhtar, his face bronzed by the sun, is a villager who has been employed by a team of glaciologi­sts measuring the impact of climate change.

Temperatur­es in northern Pakistan have increased by 1.9 degrees Celsius in the past century, authoritie­s say, causing “golf” — glacial lake outburst floods, where the dams of such lakes abruptly rupture, sending water cascading down the slopes.

Today, thirty glacial lakes are under observatio­n in the north. According to the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), such mass loss of water is “projected to accelerate throughout the 21st century, reducing water availabili­ty, hydropower potential, and changing seasonalit­y of flows in regions supplied by meltwater from major mountain ranges”.

Like the Indus, the ominous warning signs all culminate around Karachi.

The city draws almost all of its water from the river and already fails to meet even half of the four billion litres a day its inhabitant­s require, in part because of its inadequate pump network.

By 2050 the IPCC predicts a decrease in the freshwater supply of South Asia, particular­ly in large river basins such as the Indus. That means Karachi will somehow have to manage its growing population with even less water — a population with a significan­t poverty rate that will also struggle should food prices rise.

“In the long term, it is a huge challenge,” says Syed Mashkoor Ul-Hasnain of the Karachi Water Company. To make matters worse, the meteorolog­ist Rasul predicted changes in atmospheri­c pressure over the Arabian Sea that could reduce the breezes that currently temper the sweltering heat of the port.

In June an unpreceden­ted heatwave took 1,200 lives, mostly in poor neighbourh­oods of Karachi — heat traps with their massive concrete buildings, lack of shade, and the absence of aqueducts.

Could it have been a taste of the future? Back on the Passu Glacier, the research assistant Javed Akhtar is unequivoca­l.

“A calamity is coming,” he warns.

Three of the world’s most spectacula­r mountain ranges intersect in Pakistan’s north: the Himalayas, the Hindu Khush and the Karakoram, forming the largest reservoir of ice outside the poles.

 ?? AFP ?? Bleak future Residents cross the Attabad Lake. Pakistan has witnessed catastroph­ic floods in recent years and temperatur­es in northern parts have increased by 1.9 degrees Celsius in the past century.
AFP Bleak future Residents cross the Attabad Lake. Pakistan has witnessed catastroph­ic floods in recent years and temperatur­es in northern parts have increased by 1.9 degrees Celsius in the past century.
 ?? AFP ?? A new lake Attabad Lake, which was formed following a landslide in January 2010, in the Gojal Valley.
AFP A new lake Attabad Lake, which was formed following a landslide in January 2010, in the Gojal Valley.

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